NATIONAL BASIC INTELLIGENCE FACTBOOK
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79-01051A000900010006-2
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
251
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 18, 2004
Sequence Number:
6
Case Number:
Publication Date:
July 1, 1978
Content Type:
BOOK
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Body:
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National Basic Intelligence
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FACT OOK
Ja
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The National Basic Intelligence Factbook, a compilation of
basic data on political entities worldwide, is coordinated and
published semiannually by the Central Intelligence Agency. The
data are prepared by components of the Central Intelligence
Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and the Department
of State. Comments and suggestions regarding the contents
should be addressed to the Office of Geographic and Carto-
graphic Research (Att: Factbook) Central Intelligence Agency,
Washington, D.C. 20505.
The publication is prepared for the use of U.S. Government
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1 July 1978
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National Basic Intelligence
FACTBOOK
July 1978
Supersedes the January 1978 issuance of this
Factbook, copies of which should be destroyed.
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Entries in all capital letters refer to
basic data sheets included in this Factbook?
Abbreviations for International organizations .......................................................... x
United Nations (U.N.): Structure and Related Agencies ........................................ xii
Abu Dhabi (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
AFGHANISTAN .......................................................................................................... 1
'Ajman (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
ALBANIA ...................................................................................................................... 2
ALGERIA ...................................................................................................................... 3
ANDORRA .................................................................................................................. 4
ANGOLA .................................................................................................................... 5
Anguilla (see ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS)
ANTIGUA ................................................................................................................... 6
ARGENTINA ................................................................................................................ 7
AUSTRALIA .................................................................................................................. 8
AUSTRIA ...................................................................................................................... 10
Azores (see PORTUGAL)
BAHAMAS, THE ........................................................................................................ 11
BAHRAIN .................................................................................................................... 12
Balearic Islands (see SPAIN)
BANGLADESH ............................................................................................................ 13
BARBADOS .................................................................................................................. 14
BELGIUM .................................................................................................................... 15
BELIZE .......................................................................................................................... 17
BENIN ......................................................................................................................... 18
BERMUDA .................................................................................................................... 19
BHUTAN ...................................................................................................................... 20
BOLIVIA ..................................................................................................................... 21
BOTSWANA ................................................................................................................ 22
BRAZIL ........................................................................................................................ 23
British Honduras (see BELIZE)
British Solomon Islands (see SOLOMON ISLANDS)
BRUNEI ........................................................................................................................ 25
BULGARIA .................................................................................................................. 26
BURMA ........................................................................................................................ 27
BURUNDI .................................................................................................................... 28
Cabinda (see ANGOLA)
CAMBODIA ................................................................................................................ 29
CAMEROON .............................................................................................................. 30
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CANADA ......... ........._.... .,........ _ 31
Canary Islands (see SPAIN)
CAPE VERDE .... .................... ._._ .... ....... ..._._. ..... _........ 33
CENTRAL AFRICAN EMPIRE.. ... ........_.__.... ...... ........... _._..... 34
Ceylon (see SRI LANKA)
CHAD... ......_._.... ..... _ .............__ ..__ ......__ .. 35
CHILE .. ...._....... .__...... ..... . 36
CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF ... 38
CHINA, REPUBLIC OF ....... ..... .............. ............ 39
COLOMBIA .... _......... ...... ........ 41
COMOROS .... ..._.......... _ ..._.. 42
CONGO (Brazzaville) ._............... ...... __..._....... 43
Congo (Kinshasa) (see ZAIRE)
COOK ISLANDS __......... _.... ...... 44
COSTA RICA ........ ...... ............ ........ ..... 45
CUBA ... _.......... .......... .................. ...... ...... 46
CYPRUS ....... .__ _. .... ..... ........ .._ _..... 47
CZECHOSLOVAKIA............ ... ...... ....... ......... ............. .... 49
Dahomey (see BENIN)
DENMARK .........
............
51
DJIBOUTI (formerly French Territory of the Afars and Issas) ......... ...... .......... .... 52
DOMINICA ........._......._ ........ 53
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC .......... .__ . ..... _..... 54
Dubai (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
ECUADOR ......._........ ..._..... _. 55
EGYPT .............. ._.__........... ......__ ...... ..............__. 56
Ellice Islands (see TUVALU)
EL SALVADOR ............................. 58
EQUATORIAL GUINEA 59
ETHIOPIA ....... ...._ ....... 60
..................................... .
FALKLAND ISLANDS (MALVINAS) ...__.........___ ................._. _ 62
FAROE ISLANDS ................ ......... .__... 62
Fernando Po (see EQUATORIAL GUINEA)
FIJI .... ._ ................ ................... _.._.............. ..... 63
FINLAND ............ ..__................ ............. _..... 65
FRANCE ......................................... .
FRENCH GUIANA _ ............._...._.. 68
FRENCH POLYNESIA ............. ....... ...... .... . ...... 69
French Territory of the Afars and Issas (see DJIBOUTI)
Fujairah (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
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GABON ......................................................................................................................
70
GAMBIA, THE ..............................................................................................................
71
GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC ........................................................................
72
GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF ......................................................................
73
GHANA ......................................................................................................................
75
GIBRALTAR ..................................................................................................................
76
GILBERT ISLANDS ......................................................................................................
77
GREECE ......................................................................................................................
78
GREENLAND ..............................................................................................................
79
GRENADA ..................................................................................................................
80
GUADELOUPE ...........................................................................................................
81
GUATEMALA ..............................................................................................................
82
GUINEA ......................................................................................................................
83
GUINEA-BISSAU ........................................................................................................
84
Guinea, Portuguese (see GUINEA-BISSAU)
GUYANA ....................................................................................................................
85
HAITI ............................................................................................................................
87
HONDURAS ..................................................................................................................
88
HONG KONG ............................................................................................................
89
HUNGARY ..................................................................................................................
90
ICELAND ......................................................................................................................
92
INDIA ..........................................................................................................................
93
INDONESIA ................................................................................................................
94
IRAN ............................................................................................................................
96
IRAQ ............................................................................................................................
97
IRELAND ......................................................................................................................
98
ISRAEL ........................................................................................................................
100
ITALY ............................................................................................................................
101
IVORY COAST ............................................................................................................
103
JAMAICA ....................................................................................................................
104
JAPAN ........................................................................................................................
105
JORDAN ......................................................................................................................
107
KENYA ........................................................................................................................
108
KOREA, NORTH ........................................................................................................
109
KOREA, SOUTH ........................................................................................................
110
KUWAIT ......................................................................................................................
112
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LAOS .... ......... . ........
LEBANON
LESOTHO ...
................... ............
LIBERIA
LIBYA
LIECHTENSTEIN
LUXEMBOURG
113
1 14
116
117
118
119
120
MACAO 121
MADAGASCAR 122
Madeira Islands (see PORTUGAL)
Malagasy Republic (see MADAGASCAR)
MALAWI ....... 124
MALAYSIA 125
MALDIVES .......... __ ........ 128
MALI .... .......... ..... ......
MALTA . .......... _.. ..... .. ...... 130
MARTINIQUE ...... 131
MAURITANIA.... 132
MAURITIUS ......... ..... __............... 133
MEXICO... ... .... . . 135
MONACO .... .......... 136
MONGOLIA....... ... ...... 137
MOROCCO ....... . _.. __... 138
MOZAMBIQUE .... . _........ ..... _ . 139
NAMIBIA (formerly South-West Africa) _............ ................. 140
NAURU ........ .......__ ........ 142
NEPAL .._ ........ ......_ _..... 142
NETHERLANDS .... _........... 144
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES 145
NEW CALEDONIA ............... ... ....... __ . 147
NEW HEBRIDES 148
NEW ZEALAND 148
NICARAGUA 149
NIGER ................. _ ..... .......... ._..... . ---__ ...__ ........ 151
NIGERIA .. .......... .__ ..._ .. ...... ... _ .. .. .. _......... ...... ... 152
Northern Rhodesia (see ZAMBIA)
NORWAY......... .......... .__._ .......... ..__ ......... ........ ............... ..... 153
-O-
OMAN
_P_
PAKISTAN ....... ..___._ ............... ....___ _......_........................ ...... ............ 156
PANAMA ............... ....... ...._.... ._.._..__ .................. ........... ....-__. 157
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159
160
NEW GUINEA .............. .
...........
...................
PAPUA 161
PARAGUAY
TANZANIA) 162
Pemba (see .................
PERU
PHILIPPINES 165
POLAND ..................
PORTUGAL
GUINEA BISSAU)
Portuguese Guinea (see
Portuguese Timor (see INDONESIA)
-R- EMIRATES) 168
UNITED ARAB 169
Ras aI Khaimah (see
...............
REUNION
..........
170
RHODESIA GUINEA)
Rio Muni (see EQUATORIAL _..... 171
ROMANIA
RWANDA .........._ ................ 172
..............
--5- 173
174
ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANG
V5
...........
ST. LUCIA
V6
ST. VINCENT ...........
SAN MARINO .......................... 177
SAO TOME and PRINCIPE 178
SAUDI ARABIA .......... 18
SENEGAL..
.............
................
SEYCHELLES
EMIRATES)
182
(see UNITED ARAB
Sharjah 1
LEONE ... . 183
SIERRA
184
SINGAPORE
ISLANDS (formerly British Solomon islands)
185
SOLOMON
....................
SOMALIA ..............
....................
SOUTH AFRICA
Southern Rhodesia (see RHODESIA) 187
NAMIBIA)
South Vilest Africa (see
.......................
SPAIN
(see WESTERN SAHARA) 191
Spanish Sahara
SRI LANKA ( ..............................
formerly Ceylon) 192
SUDAN .................................................... 193
195
................
................... 196
SURINAM
SWAZILAND .....................
.........................................
197
SWEDEN . . . . . . . . . . ........
SWITZERLAND .................................
SYRIA .....................................
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Tanganyika (see TANZANIA) Page
TANZANIA
............
Tasmania
(see AUSTRALIA)
THAILAND
................
199
TOGO ....
............
TONGA
.............
. . . . . . 200
............
Transkei
(see SOUTH AFRICA) 201
TRINIDAD
AND TOBAGO
202
.................
TUNISIA ........................................
TURKEY .... ......... .
.......
TUVALU ..... ....... ................... ....... 203
205
(formerly Ellice Islands) ........
206
...........
UGANDA ... 207
Umm al Q ..
U.S.S.R... ..... aiwain (see .
.......... UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)...................
...................
208
UNITED
ARAB
EMIRATES: `..
Abu Dhabi,
Ras al
Khaimah,
Sharjah, Umm Ilman, Dubai, Fujairah, 209
United Arab Republic al Qa Aiwain
UNITED (see EGYPT) 210
KINGDOM
UNITED STATES ..............
._............
UPPER VOLTA ...............
211
URUGUAY
227
.......................
_... .... .. 213
-V-
VATICAN CITY ........ 214
VENEZUELA..
..............................
........................
VIETNAM
215
-W- ........................
216
WALLIS and FUTUNA 218
Walvis Bay (see SOUTH AFRICA .
)
WESTERN SAHARA ...................................
WESTERN (formerly 219
SAMOA Spanish Sahara)
.........................
-Y- 219
YEMEN (Aden) 220
YEMEN
(Sans) ............
YUGOSLAVIA .... ........
221
-Z- ..................
......................... 222
......................
223
ZAIRE
ZAMBIA ...............................
............................
Zanzibar (see TANZANIA)................. ...... 225
...........
226
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I CANADA
II MIDDLE AMERICA
III SOUTH AMERICA
IV EUROPE
V THE MIDDLE EAST
VI AFRICA
VII U.S.S.R. and ASIA
VIII OCEANIA
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ABBREVIATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
AAPSO Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Organization
ADB Asian Development Bank
AFDB African Development Bank
ANZUS ANZUS Council; treaty signed by Australia, New Zealand, and the
United States
ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
ASPAC Asian and Pacific Council
BENELUX Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg Economic Union
BLEU Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union
CACM Central American Common Market
CARICOM Caribbean Common Market
CARIFTA Caribbean Free Trade Association
CEAO West African Economic Community
CEMA Council for Economic Mutual Assistance
CENTO Central Treaty Organization
? ? . Colombo Plan
Council of Europe
DAC Development Assistance Committee (OECD)
EAMA African States associated with the EEC
EC European Communities (EEC, ECSC, EURATOM)
ECOWAS Economic Community of West African States
ECSC European Coal and Steel Community
EEC European Economic Community (Common Market)
EFTA European Free Trade Association
EIB European Investment Bank
ELDO European Space Vehicle Launcher Development Organization
EMA European Monetary Agreement
ENTENTE Political-Economic Association of Ivory Coast, Dahomey, Niger, Upper
Volta, and Togo
ESRO European Space Research Organization
EURATOM European Atomic Energy Community
G-77 Group of 77
IADB Inter-American Defense Board
ICES International Cooperation in Ocean Exploration
IDB Inter-American Development Bank
IEA International Energy Agency (Associated with OECD)
IHO International Hydrographic Organization
IPU Inter-Parliamentary Union
IRC International Red Cross
LAFTA Latin American Free Trade Association
LICROSS League of Red Cross Societies
NAM Non-Aligned Movement
NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
OAS Organization of American States
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ABBREVIATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (Cont.)
OAU Organization of African Unity
OCAM Afro-Malagasy and Mauritian Common Organization
ODECA Organization of Central American States
OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
SELA Latin American Economic System
UDEAC Economic and Customs Union of Central Africa
UEAC Union of Central African States
WEU Western European Union
WPC World Peace Council
AIOEC Association of Iron Ore Exporting Countries
ANRPC Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries
APC African Peanut (Groundnut) Council
ASSIMER International Mercury Producers Association
CIPEC Intergovernmental Council of Copper Exporting Countries
IATP International Association of Tungsten Producers
IBA International Bauxite Association
ICAC International Cotton Advisory Committee
ICCO International Cocoa Council
ICO International Coffee Organization
International Lead and Zinc Study Group
IOOC International Olive Oil Council
ISO International Sugar Organization
ITC International Tin Council
IWC International Whaling Commission
IWC International Wheat Council
OAPEC Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries
OPEC Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
UPEB Union of Banana Exporting Countries
WSG International Wool Study Group
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UNITED NATIONS (U.N.): STRUCTURE AND RELATED AGENCIES
Principal Organs:
SC
GA
ECOSOC
TC
ICJ
Operating Bodies:
UNCTAD
TDB
UNDP
UNICEF
UNIDO
Security Council
General Assembly
Economic and Social Council
Trusteeship Council
International Court of Justice
Secretariat
U.N. Conference on Trade and
Trade and Development Board
U.N. Development Program
U.N. Children's Fund
U.N. Industrial Development Organization
ECA
ECE
ECLA
ECWA
ESCAP
Intergovernmental
FAO
GATT
IBRD
ICAO
I DA
IFAD
IFC
ILO
IMCO
IMF (FUND)
ITU
UNESCO
UPU
WFC
WHO
WIPO
WMO
Autonomous
IAEA
Economic Commission for Africa
Economic Commission for Europe
Economic Commission for Latin America
Economic Commission for Western Asia
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific
Agencies Related to the U.N.:
Food and Agriculture Organization
General Agreement on Tariffs and
International Bank for Reconstruction
International
International
International
International
International
Trade
and Development (World
Civil Aviation Organization
Development Association (IBRD Affiliate)
Fund for Agricultural Development
Finance Corporation (IBRD Affiliate)
Labor Organization
World Intellectual Property Organization
World Meteorological Organization
International Monetary Fund
International Telecommunication Union
United Nations Educational, Scientific,
Universal Postal Union
World Food Council
World Health Organization
Organization Under the U.N.:
International Atomic Energy Agency
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Political, sociological, and economic data, including monetary conversion rates, generally
reflect information through mid-April 1978, except for population estimates, which have been
projected to 1 July 1978. Military manpower estimates are as of 1 July 1978 except for
average number of males reaching military age, which are projected averages for the 5-year
period 1978-82. Military and communications data are as of 30 April 1978 unless otherwise
indicated.
Most of the land utilization estimates are rough approximations, and most of the
statistical data are rounded (thousands and millions). Figures for "arable" may reflect only
the area actually under crops rather than the potential cultivable. Fishing limits are included
only when they differ from the territorial limits.
For some countries GDP, rather than GNP, is shown. The difference between the two is
in the addition or subtraction of the value of return on foreign investment. GDP equals GNP
plus income earned in the country but sent abroad, minus income earned abroad but sent into
the country. GDP thus tends to exceed GNP in debtor countries, and the reverse is true in
creditor countries.
Major ports are the largest maritime ports of the country, relative to other ports of the
same country, on the basis of estimated port capacity, alongside berthing accommodations,
and commercial or naval importance. Minor ports are the remaining ports of a country which
have, relative to the major ports, significantly lower estimated capacity, fewer alongside
berthing accommodations, are of less commercial or naval importance. Major transport
aircraft are those weighing over 20,000 pounds. Military budgets are in U.S. dollar
equivalents. The dollar sign refers to U.S. dollars unless otherwise stated. The abbreviation FY
stands for U.S. fiscal year; all years are calendar years unless otherwise indicated.
Approximate Metric Conversions
Symbol When You Know Multiply by To Find symbol Symbol When You Know Multiply by To Find Symbol
LENGTH
in
millimeters 0.04 inches in
can centimeters 0.4 inches ft
m meters 3.3 feet
m meters 1.1 yards yd
km kilometers 0.6 miles mi
AREA
cm, square centimeters 0.16 square inches in'
m~ square meters 1.2 square yards Y&
km' square kilometers 0.4 square miles mP
ho hectares (10,000 ml) 2.5 acres
MASS (.eight)
9 gram 0.035 ounces oz
kg kilograms 2.2 pounds lb
tormes (1000 kg) 1.1 short tons
VOLUME
rat milliliters 0,03 fluid ounces fl oz
I liters 2.1 pints pt
liters 1.06 qu.,t, at
I liters 0.26 gallons gal
ra~ cubic motors 35 cubic feet ft,
m, cubic meters 1.3 cubic yards yd,
in inches 2.5 centimeters cra
ft feet 30 centimeters cra
yd yards 0.9 meters m
mi miles 1.6 kilometers km
AREA
W square inches 6.5 square centimeters cm,
W square feet 0.09 square meters ra~
yd2 square yards 0.8 square meter,
mV square miles 2.6 square kilometers kM2
acres 0.4 hectares h.
oz ounces 28 grams
lb pounds 0.45 kilograms
shc,ri tons 0.9 tonnes
(2000 lb) -
tsp teaspoons 5 milliliters ml
Tlbsp tablespoon, 15 milliliters ral
fl oz fluid ounces 30 milliliters ml
c cup$ 0.24 liters I
pt pints 0.47 liters
qt quarts 0.95 liters
gal gallons 3.8 liters
ft3 cubic feet 0.03 cubic meters
yd' cub ters m,
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AFGHANISTAN
Government leaders: President of the Revolutionary
Council and Prime Minister Nur Mohammad Taraki; Vice
President of the Revolutionary Council and Deputy Prime
Minister Babrak Karmal; Minister of Defense Col. Abdul
Qader
Suffrage: universal from age 18
Political parties and leaders: The People's Democratic
Party of Afghanistan is being formed by the new regime
Communists: Khaki, a pro-Moscow party, led by Taraki
and Karmal, claims 50,000 members; the Sholaye-Jaweid is a
much smaller pro-Peking group
Other political or pressure groups: the military supports
the government; possible religious or tribal opposition
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, FAO, G-77, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $2.4 billion (FY77), $176 per capita; real growth
rate about 2.5% (1973-77)
Agriculture: agriculture and animal husbandry account
for over 50% of GNP and occupy nearly 85% of the labor
force; main crops-wheat and other grains, cotton, fruits,
nuts; largely self-sufficient; food shortages-wheat, sugar,
tea
Major industries: cottage industries, food processing,
textiles, cement, coal mining
Electric power: 360,000 kW capacity (1977); 585 million
kWh produced (1977), 35 kWh per capita
Exports: $310 million (f.o.b., FY77); fresh and dried
fruits, natural gas, karakul skins, carpets, hides, wool and
cotton
Imports: $343 million (f.o.b., FY77); non-metallic miner-
als, sugar, tires and tubes, textiles, tea, used clothing,
tobacco, transportation, and wheat
Major trade partners: exports-U.S.S.R., India, U.K.,
Pakistan, West Germany, Switzerland, U.S.; imports-Japan,
U.S.S.R., India, West Germany, U.K., U.S.
Aid: economic-U.S. (FY70-76), $145.0 million commit-
ted; U.S.S.R. (1970-76), $569.9 million; Eastern Europe
(1970-76), $28 million; China (1970-76), $48.5 million;
OPEC (1970-76), $818 million; military-U.S. (FY70-76),
$1.4 million; U.S.S.R. (1970-76), $259 million; Eastern
Europe (1970-76), $11 million
Budget: current expenditures $158 million, capital
expenditures $163 million for FY76
Monetary conversion rate: 45 Afghanis=US$1 (official);
47.5 Afghanis=US$1 (March 1977)
Fiscal year: 21 March-20 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 0.6 km (single track) 1.524-meter gage,
government-owned spur of Soviet line
Highways: 20,885 km total (1975); 2,460 km paved, 3,910
km gravel, 8,735 km improved earth, and 5,780 km
unimproved earth
LAND
647,500 km2; 22% arable (12% cultivated, 10% pasture),
75% desert, waste, or urban, 3% forested
Land boundaries: 5,510 km
PEOPLE
Population: 14,381,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Afghan(s); adjective-Afghan
Ethnic divisions: 50% Pushtuns, 25% Tajiks, 9% Uzbeks,
9% Hazaras; minor ethnic groups include Chahar Aimaks,
Turkmen, Kizelbashes, and others
Religion: 87% Sunni Muslim, 12% Shia Muslim, 1% other
Language: 50% Pushtu, 35% Afghan Persian (Dari), 11%
Turkic languages (primarily Uzbek and Turkmen), 10%
thirty minor languages (primarily Baluchi and Pashai); much
bilingualism
Literacy: under 10%
Labor force: about 5.75 million (FY77 est.); 75%-80%
agriculture and animal husbandry, 20%-25% commerce,
small industry, services; massive shortage of skilled labor
Organized labor: none
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Afghanistan
Type: martial law
Capital: Kabul
Political subdivisions: 26 provinces with centrally ap-
pointed governors
Legal system: not established; legal education at Uni-
versity of Kabul; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
Branches: leaders of the Khalk communist party seized
power in late April 1978; they are in the process of forming a
People's Democratic Party; its central committee will be the
highest authority in the state; future government structure is
unclear
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Inland waterways: total navigability 1,200 km; steamers
use Amu Darya
Ports: only minor river ports
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 36 total, 35 usable; 9 with permanent-surface
runways; 6 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 11 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: limited telephone, telegraph, and
radiobroadcast services; television to be introduced by 1979;
35,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 pop].); 2 AM, no FM, no TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 4.1 million; 2.2
million fit for military service; about 162,000 reach military
age (22) annually
Supply: dependent on foreign sources, almost exclusively
the U.S.S.R.
Military budget: estimated expenditures for fiscal year
ending 31 March 1978, about $60.7 million; approximately
8.3% of central government budget
ALBANIA
RUMANIA
YUGOSLAVIA
BULG
Tirane
B
ANIA
P
1 v.
%'%R EEt
LAND
28,749 kmz; 19% arable, 24% other agricultural, 43%
forested, 14% other
Land boundaries: 716 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 15 nm
Coastline: 418 km (including Sazan Island)
PEOPLE
Population: 2,569,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Albanian(s); adjective-Albanian
Ethnic divisions: 96% Albanian, remaining 4% are
Greeks, Vlachs, Gypsies, and Bulgarians
Religion: 70% Muslim, 20% Albanian Orthodox, 10%
Roman Catholic; observances prohibited; Albania claims to
be the world's first atheist state
Language: Albanian, Greek
Literacy: about 70%; no reliable current statistics avail-
able, but probably greatly improved
Labor force: 911,000 (1969); 60.5% agriculture, 17.9%
industry, 21.6% other nonagricultural
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Socialist Republic of Albania
Type: Communist state
Capital: Tirane
Political subdivisions: 27 rethet (districts), including
capital, 200 localities, 2,600 villages
Legal system: based on constitution adopted in 1976;
judicial review of legislative acts only in the Presidium of the
People's Assembly, which is not a true court; legal education
at State University of Tirane; has not accepted compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Liberation Day, 29 November
Branches: People's Assembly, Council of Ministers,
judiciary
Government leaders: Chairman of Council of Ministers,
Mehmet Shehu; Chairman Presidium of the People's
Assembly, Haxhi Lleshi (Chief of State)
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: national elections theoretically held every 4
years; last elections 6 October 1974; 99.9% of electorate
voted
Political parties and leaders: Albanian Workers Party
only; First Secretary, Enver Hoxha
Communists: 101,500 party members (November 1976)
Member of: CEMA, IAEA, IPU, ITU, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WFTU, WHO, WMO; has not participated in CEMA
since rift with U.S.S.R. in 1961; officially withdrew from
Warsaw Pact 13 September 1968
ECONOMY
GNP: $748 million in 1970 (at 1970 prices), $350 per
capita
Agriculture: food deficit area; main crops-corn, wheat,
tobacco, sugar beets, cotton; food shortages-wheat; caloric
intake, 2,100 calories per day per capita (1961/62)
Major industries: agricultural processing, textiles and
clothing, lumber, and extractive industries
Shortages: spare parts, machinery and equipment, wheat
Electric power: 500,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.8 billion
kWh produced (1977), 700 kWh per capita
2
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ALBANIA/ALGERIA
Exports: $746 million (1971-75 est.); 1964 trade-55%
minerals, metals, fuels; 23% foodstuffs (including cigarettes);
17% agricultural materials (except foods); 5% consumer
goods
Imports: $1,238 million (1971-75 est.); 1964 trade-50%
machinery, equipment, and spare parts; 16% minerals,
metals, fuels, construction materials; 16% foodstuffs; 7%
consumer goods; 7% fertilizers, other chemicals, rubber; 4%
agricultural materials (except foodstuffs)
Monetary conversion rate: 5 leks=US$1 (commercial);
12.5 leks=US$1 (noncommercial)
Fiscal year: same as calendar year; economic data
reported for calendar years except for caloric intake, which
is reported for consumption year 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 277 km standard gage (1.435 m), single track,
government-owned (1975)
Highways: 4,989 km total; 1,287 km paved, 1,609 km
crushed stone and/or gravel, 2,093 km improved or
unimproved earth (1975)
Inland waterways: 43 km plus Albanian sections of Lake
Scutari, Lake Ohrid, and Lake Prespa (1977)
Freight carried: rail-2.8 million metric tons, 180 million
metric ton/km (1971); highways-39 million metric tons,
900 million metric ton/km (1971)
Ports: 1 major (Durres), 3 minor (1977)
Pipelines: crude oil, 117 km; refined products, 65 km;
natural gas, 64 km
Civil air: no civil airline
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget (announced): for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, 824 million leks; 10.7% of total budget
ALGERIA
LAND
2,460,500 km'; 3% cultivated, 16% pasture and meadows,
1% forested, 80% desert, waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 6,260 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 1,183 km
PEOPLE
Population: 17,639,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Algerian(s); adjective-Algerian
Ethnic divisions: 99% Arab-Berbers,
less than
1%
Europeans
Religion: 99% Muslim, 1% Christian and Hebrew
Language: Arabic (official), French, Berber dialects
Literacy: 25% (5% Arabic, 9% French, 11% both)
Labor force: 4.0 million; 50% agriculture, 20% industry,
25% other (military, police, civil service, transportation
workers, teachers, merchants, construction workers); at least
20% of urban labor unemployed
Organized labor: 25% of labor force claimed; General
Union of Algerian Workers (UGTA) is the only labor
organization and is subordinate to the National Liberation
Front
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic and Popular Republic of Algeria
Type: republic
Capital: Algiers
Political subdivisions: 31 Wilayas (departments or
provinces)
Legal system: based on French and Islamic law, with
socialist principles; new constitution adopted by referendum
November 1976; judicial review of legislative acts in ad hoc
Constitutional Council composed of various public officials,
including several Supreme Court justices; Supreme Court
divided into 4 chambers; legal education at Universities of
Algiers, Oran, and Constantine; has not accepted compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 1 November
Branches: executive dominant; unicameral legislature
reconvened in March 1977; judiciary
Government leader: Houari Boumediene, President of
State and President of Council of the Revolution, overthrew
elected President Ahmed Ben Bella June 19, 1965
Suffrage: universal over age 19
Elections (latest): presidential 10 December 1976; depart-
mental assemblies 2 June 1974; local assemblies 30 March
1975; legislative elections held 25 February 1977
Political parties and leaders: National Liberation Front
(FLN)
Communists: 400 (est.); Communist Party illegal (banned
1962)
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Member of: AFDB, AIOEC , Arab League, ASSIMER,
FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto), IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA,
ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO,
IMF, IOOC, ITU, NAM, OAPEC, OAU, OPEC, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $16.2 billion (1977 provisional), $880 per capita; in
real terms, 6% growth in 1977
Agriculture: main crops-wheat, barley, grapes, citrus
fruits
Major industries: petroleum, light industries, natural gas,
mining, petrochemical, electrical, and automotive plants
under construction
Electric power: 1,690,000 kW capacity (1977); 4.5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 250 kWh per capita
Exports: $5.8 billion (f.o.b., 1977 est.); 90% hydrocarbons,
also wine, citrus fruit, iron ore, vegetables; U.S. took 36% of
exports in 1976, supplanting France as Algeria's leading
trade partner
Imports: $6.9 billion (c.i.f., 1977); major items-capital
goods 35%, semi-finished goods 38%, foodstuffs 25%; from
France 23%, U.S. 9%
Monetary conversion rate: 1 DA=US$0.24
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,950 km total; 2,690 km standard gage (1.435
m), 1,140 km 1.055-meter gage, 120 km meter gage (1.000
m); 302 km electrified; 193 km double track
Highways: 78,410 km total; 45,070 km concrete or
bituminous, 33,340 km gravel, crushed stone, unimproved
earth
Ports: 9 major, 8 minor
Pipelines: crude oil, 3,983 km; refined products, 298 km;
natural gas, 2,398 km
Civil air: 39 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
in)
Airfields: 182 total, 176 usable; 53 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 21 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 94 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 3 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: adequate domestic and interna-
tional service in the north, sparse in the south; Atlantic
Ocean satellite station plus domestic satellite system U/C
and partially operative; 266,000 telephones (1.5 per 100
popl.); 18 AM and 40 TV stations; 5 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,740,000; 2,233,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(19) annually 192,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $385 million; 6% of national budget
ANDORRA
LAND
466 kmz
Land boundaries: 105 kni
PEOPLE
Population: 29,000 (official estimate for 1 July
Nationality: noun-Andorran(s); adjective-Andorran
Ethnic divisions: Catalan stock; 30% Andorrans, 61%
Spanish, 6% French, 3% other
Religion: virtually all Roman
Language: Catalan, many also
Castilian
Catholic
speak some French and
Labor force: unorganized; largely shepherds
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Valls de'Andorra (Catalan)
Type: unique coprincipality under formal sovereignty of
President of France and Spanish Bishop of Seo de Urge],
who are represented locally by officials called verguers
Capital: Andorra
Political subdivisions: 6 districts-Andorra la Vella, Saint
Julia de Loria, Encamp, Canillo, La Massana, and Ordino
Legal system: based on French and Spanish civil codes;
Plan of Reform adopted 1866 serves as constitution; no
judicial review of legislative acts; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
Branches: legislature (General Council) consisting of 24
members with one-half elected every 2 years for 4-year
term; executive-syndic and a deputy sub-syndic chosen by
General Council for 3-year terms; judiciary chosen by
coprinces who appoint 2 civil judges, a judge of appeals, and
2 Batles (court prosecutors)
Suffrage: males of 21 or over who are third generation
Andorrans vote for General Council members; same right
granted to women in April 1970
Elections: half of General Council chosen every 2 years,
last election December 1977
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Political parties and leaders: traditionally no political
parties but only partisans for particular independent
candidates for the General Council, on the basis of
competence, personality and orientation toward Spain or
France; various small pressure groups developed in 1972;
first formal political party-Andorran Democratic Associ-
ation-formed in November 1976
Communists: negligible
ECONOMY
Agriculture: sheep raising; small quantities of tobacco,
rye, wheat, barley, oats, and some vegetables (less than 4% of
land is arable)
Major industries: tourism, sheep, timber, tobacco, and
smuggling
Shortages: food
Electric power: 25,000 kW capacity (1977); 100 million
kWh produced (1977), 3,448 kWh per capita; power is
mainly exported to Spain and France
Major trade partners: Spain, France
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: about 96 km
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: none
Telecommunications: international circuits to Spain and
France; 2 AM stations, 1 FM, 1 TV station; about 3,900
telephones (14.3 per 100 pop1.)
DEFENSE FORCES
Andorra has no defense forces; Spain and France are
responsible for protection as needed
ANGOLA
LAND
1,245,790 km2; 1% cultivated, 44% forested, 22% meadows
and pastures, 33% other (including fallow)
Land boundaries: 5,070 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 20 nm
Coastline: 1,600 km
PEOPLE
Population: Angola (including Cabinda), 6,449,000 (July
1978), does not take into account emigration from Angola,
average annual growth rate 2.4% (current); Cabinda,
103,000 (July 1978); average annual growth rate 3.3% (12-60
to 12-70)
Nationality: noun-Angolan(s); adjective-Angolan
Ethnic divisions: 93% African, 5% European, 1% mestizo
Religion: about 84% animist, 12% Roman Catholic, 4%
Protestant
Language: Portuguese (official), many native dialects
Literacy: 10-15%
Labor force: 2.6 million economically active (1964);
531,000 wage workers (1967)
Organized labor: approx. 65,000 (1967)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of Angola
Type: republic; achieved independence from Portugal in
November 1975; constitution promulgated 1975; govern-
ment formed after civil war which ended in early 1976
Capital: Luanda
Political subdivisions: 16 administrative districts includ-
ing the coastal exclave of Cabinda
Legal system: based on Portuguese civil law system and
customary law
National holiday: independence Day, 11 November
Branches: the official party is the supreme political
institution
Government leaders: Agostinho Neto, President
Suffrage: to be determined
Elections: none held to date
Political parties and leaders: Popular Movement for the
Liberation of Angola-Labor Party (MPLA-Labor Party), led
by Agostinho Neto, only legal party; National Front for the
Liberation of Angola (FNLA) and National Union for the
Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), defeated in civil
war, carrying out insurgencies
Member of: G-77, ILO, NAM, OAU, U.N., UNICEF,
WHO
ECONOMY
GDP: $3.0 billion (1974 est.), $500 per capita, 6.1% real
growth (1970-72); growth probably negative in 1975-77
Agriculture: cash crops-coffee, sisal, corn, cotton, sugar,
manioc, and tobacco; food crops-cassava, corn, vegetables,
plantains, bananas, and other local foodstuffs; largely
self-sufficient in food
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Fishing: catch 183,850 metric tons (1975); exports $53.0
million; imports $5.6 million (1973)
Major industries: mining (oil, diamonds), fish processing,
brewing, tobacco, sugar processing, textiles, cement, food
processing plants, building construction
Electric power: 525,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.3 billion
kWh produced (1977), 200 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.2 billion (f.o.b., 1974); oil, coffee, diamonds,
sisal, fish and fish products, iron ore, timber, corn, and
cotton; exports down sharply 1975-77
Imports: $614 million (c.i.f., 1974); capital equipment
(machinery and electrical equipment), wines, bulk iron and
ironwork, steel and metals, vehicles and spare parts, textiles
and clothing, medicines; military deliveries partially offset
drop in imports in 1975-77
Major trade partners: Portugal, West Germany, U.S.,
U.K., Japan; trade with U.S.S.R. and Cuba increasing since
independence
Aid: military aid from U.S.S.R. and Cuba in 1975
Budget: (1975) balanced at about $740 million by former
Portuguese administration; budget not yet published by new
government
Monetary conversion rate: 40.643 escudos=US$1 as of
November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,088 km total; 2,778 km 1.067-meter gage,
310 km 0.600-meter gage
Highways: 73,828 km total; 8,577 km bituminous-surface
treatment, 28,723 km crushed stone, gravel, or improved
earth, remainder unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 3,220 km navigable
Ports: 3 major (Luanda, Lobito, Mocamedes), 15 minor
Pipelines: crude oil, 179 km
Civil air: 23 major transport aircraft (including 2 leased
in)
Airfields: 574 total, 508 usable; 25 with permanent-
surface runways; I with runway over 3,660 m, 8 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 88 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: fair network of open-wire and
radio-relay facilities; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station;
32,000 telephones (0.5 per 100 popl.); 24 AM, 12 FM, and 1
TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,574,000; 791,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually, 59,000
ANTIGUA
LAND
280 kmz; 54% arable, 5% pasture, 14% forested, 9% unused
but potentially productive, 18% wasteland and built on
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 153 km
PEOPLE
Population: 73,000 (July 1978), average
rate 1.3% (7-70 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Antiguan(s); adjective-Antiguan
Ethnic divisions: almost entirely African Negro
Religion: Church of England (predominant) othe
r
Protestant sects, and some Roman Catholic ,
Language: English
Literacy: about 80%
Organized labor: 18,000, 20% unemployment
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Antigua
Type: dependent territory with full internal autonomy as
a British "Associated State"
Capital: St. Johns
Political subdivisions: 6 parishes, 2 dependencies (Bar-
buda, Redonda)
Legal system: based on English law; British Caribbean
Court of Appeal has exclusive original jurisdiction and an
appellate jurisdiction, consists of Chief Justice and 5 justices
Branches: legislative, 21-member popularly elected
House of Representatives; executive, Prime Minister and
Cabinet
Government leaders: Premier Vere C. Bird, Sr.; Deputy
Premier Lester Bird; Governor Sir Wilfred Ebenezer Jacobs
Suffrage: universal suffrage age 18 and over
Elections: every 5 years; last general election 11 February
1976
Political parties and leaders: Antigua Labor Party (ALP),
Vere C. Bird, Sr., Lester Bird; Progressive Labor Movement
(PLM), George Herbert Walter; Antigua People's Party
(APP), J. Rowan Henry
Voting strength: 1976 election-House of Representative
seats-ALP 10, PLM 5, independent 1, tie 1.
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ANTIGUA/ARGENTINA
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: Afro-Caribbean
Liberation Movement (ACLM), a small black nationalist
group led by Timothy Hector; Antigua Freedom Fighters
(AFF), a small black radical group, leaders unknown
Member of: CARICOM, ISO
ECONOMY
GDP: $51 million (1974 est.), $640 per capita; 2.7% real
growth
Agriculture: main crop, cotton
Major industries: oil refining, tourism
Shortages: electric power
Electric power: 31,200 kW capacity (1977); 60 million
kWh produced (1977), 835 kWh per capita
Exports: $22 million (f.o.b., 1975); petroleum products,
cotton
Imports: $54 million (c.i.f., 1975); crude oil, food, clothing
Major trade partners: 30% U.K., 25% U.S., 18%
Commonwealth Caribbean countries
Aid: economic-U.S. authorizations (FY46-75), $1.5 mil-
lion in loans
Budget: (projected 1977) revenues, $17 million; expendi-
tures, $21 million
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dol-
lars=US$l (July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 78 km narrow gage (0.760 m), employed
almost exclusively for handling cane
Highways: 380 km total; 240 km main, 140 km secondary
Ports: 1 major (St. John's), 1 minor
Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased out
Airfields: 3 total, 3 usable; 1 with asphalt runway 2,745
m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: automatic telephone system; 3,500
telephones (4.9 per 100 popl.); tropospheric scatter links with
Tortola and St. Lucia; 3 AM stations, 1 FM station, and 1 TV
station; 1 coaxial submarine cable
ARGENTINA
LAND
2,771,300 km2; 57% agricultural (11% crops, improved
pasture and fallow, 46% natural grazing land), 25% forested,
18% mountain, urban, or waste
Land boundaries: 9,414 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm (continen-
tal shelf, including sovereignty over superiacent waters)
Coastline: 4,989 km
(See reference -P llll
PEOPLE
Population: 26,487,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 1.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Argentine(s); adjective-Argentine
Ethnic divisions: approximately 85% white, 15% mestizo,
Indian, or other nonwhite groups
Religion: 90% nominally Roman Catholic (less than 20%
practicing), 2% Protestant, 2% Jewish, 6% other
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 85% (90% in Buenos Aires)
Labor force: 10 million; 19% agriculture, 25% manufac-
turing, 20% services, 11% commerce, 6% transport and
communications, 19% other; 4-5% estimated unemployment
Organized labor: 25% of labor force (est.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Argentine Republic
Type: republic
Capital: Buenos Aires
Political subdivisions: 22 provinces, 1 district (Federal
Capital), and 1 territory
Legal system: based on Spanish and French civil codes;
constitution adopted 1853 partially superseded in 1966 by
the Statute of the Revolution which takes precedence over
the constitution when the two are in conflict, further
changes may be made by new government; judicial review
of legislative acts; legal education at University of Buenos
Aires and other public and private universities; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 May
Branches: presidency; legislature; national judiciary
Government leader: President, Lt. Gen. Jorge Rafael
Videla, Commander in Chief of the Army, chosen by the
three-man junta that took power on 24 March 1976
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Government structure: the junta, composed of the chiefs
of the three armed services, retains supreme authority;
active duty or retired officers fill all but two cabinet posts
and administer all provincial and many local governments;
in addition, the military now oversee the nation's principal
labor confederation and unions, as well as other civilian
pressure groups; Congress has been disbanded and all
political activity suspended; a nine-man Legislative Council,
composed of senior officers, advises the junta on lawmaking
Political parties: a number of civilian political groupings
remain potentially influential, despite the suspension of all
partisan activity; these include Justicialist Party (Peronist
coalition that formerly governed) and the Radical Civic
Union, center-left party providing the chief civilian
opposition to the Peronists; the Moscow-oriented Communist
Party remains legal, but extreme leftist splinter groups have
been outlawed
Communists: some 70,000 members in various party
organizations, including a small nucleus of activists
Other political or pressure groups: Peronist-dominated
labor movement, General Economic Confederation (Peron-
ist-leaning association of small businessmen), Argentine
Industrial Union (manufacturer's association), Argentine
Rural Society (large landowner's association), business
organizations, students, and the Catholic Church
Member of: FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, 1110, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
tOOC, ISO, ITU, IWC-International Whaling Commis-
sion, IWC-International Wheat Council, LAFTA, NAM,
OAS, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $48 billion (1977), $1,870 per capita;
18%
government consumption, 62% private consumption,
22%
investment, -2% net foreign demand (1975); real
growth rate 1977, 4.4%
GDP
Agriculture: main products-cereals, oilseeds, livestock
products; Argentina is a major world exporter of temperate
zone foodstuffs
Fishing: catch 350,000 metric tons (1976 est.); exports $42
million (1976 est.)
Major industries: food processing (especially meatpack-
ing), motor vehicles, consumer durables, textiles, chemicals,
printing and metall
urgy
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $1
billion in loans, $17.9 million in grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $1.4 billion; from other Western
countries (1960-66), $315.5 million; from Communist
countries (1954-76), $513 million ($89 million drawn);
military-assistance from U.S. (FY46-76), $265 million
Budget: (1978) 8,000 billion pesos=$11 billion at ex-
change rate of March 1978
Monetary conversion
1978)
Fiscal year: calendar
COMMUNICATIONS
rate: 700 pesos=US$1 (March
Railroads: 39,738 km total; 3,086 km standard gage (1.435
m), 22,788 km broad gage (1.676 m), 13,461 km meter gage
(1.000 m), 403 km 0.750-meter gage
Highways: 219,700 km total, of which 43,050 km paved,
76,800 km gravel, 85,950 km improved earth, 13,900 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 11,000 km navigable
Ports: 7 major, 21 minor
Pipelines: 4,090 km crude oil; 2,200 km refined products;
8,172 km natural gas
Civil air: 43 major transport aircraft, includes 2 leased in
Airfields: 2,388 total, 2,151 usable; 90 with permanent-
surface runways; 21 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 315 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 6 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: extensive modern system; tele-
phone network has 2.54 million sets (9.8 per 100 popl.), radio
relay widely used, 1 satellite station with 2 Atlantic Ocean
antennas; 160 AM, 12 FM, and 64 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 6,535,000; 5,299,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually about 226,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $1,742.2 million; about 15% of total central
government budget
AUSTRALIA
LAND
Crude steel: 2.7 million metric tons produced (1977), 90 7,692,300 km2; 6% arable, 58% pasture, 2% forested, 34%
kg per capita
other
Electric power: 9.16 million kW capacity (1977); 27
billion kWh produced (1977), 1,030 kWh per capita
Exports: $5.6 billion (f.o.b., 1977); meat, corn, wheat,
wool, hides, oilseeds
Imports: $4.0 billion (c.i.f., 1977); machinery, fuel and
lubricating oils, iron and steel, intermediate industrial
products
Major trade partners (1976): exports-10% Italy, 6%
U.S.S.R., 9% Netherlands, 11% Brazil, 7% U.S.; imports-
18% U.S., 8% Japan, 11% FRG, 12% Brazil
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 12
nm; prawn and crayfish on continental shelf)
Coastline: about 25,760 km
PEOPLE
Population: 14,227,000 (July
growth rate 1.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Australian(s); adjective-Australian
Ethnic divisions: 99% Caucasian, 1% Asian and aborigine
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Religion: 98% Christian
Language: English
Literacy: 98.5%
Labor force: 6 million; 14% agriculture, 32% industry,
37% services, 15% commerce, 2% other; 6% unemployment
Organized labor: 44% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Commonwealth of Australia
Type: federal state recognizing Elizabeth II as sovereign
or head of state
Capital: Canberra
Political subdivisions: 6 states and 2 territories (Austra-
lian Capital Territory (Canberra) and Northern Territory)
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
adopted 1900; High Court has jurisdiction over cases
involving interpretation of the constitution; accepts compul-
sory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: 26 January
Branches: Parliament (House of Representatives and
Senate); Prime Minister and Cabinet responsible to House;
independent judiciary
Government leaders: Governor General Sir Zelman
Cowen; Prime Minister John Malcolm Fraser
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: held at 3-year intervals, or sooner if Parliament
is dissolved by Prime Minister; last election December 1977
Political parties and leaders: Government-Liberal
Party (Malcolm Fraser) and National Country Party
(Douglas Anthony); opposition-Labour Party (William J.
Hayden)
Voting strength (1977 Parliamentary election): lower
house: Liberal-Country Coalition, 86 seats; Labour Party, 38
seats; Senate: Liberal Country Coalition, 35 seats; Labour, 26
seats; Democrats, 2 seats; Independents, 1 seat
Communists: 3,900 members (est.)
Other political or pressure groups: Democratic Labour
Party (anti-Communist Labour Party splinter group)
Member of: ADB, AIOEC, ANZUS, CIPEC (associate),
Colombo Plan, Commonwealth, DAC, ELDO, ESCAP,
FAO, GATT, IAEA, IATP, IBA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA,
IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study
Group, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-
International Whaling Commission, IWC-International
Wheat Council, OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $95.2 billion (1977), $6,830 per capita; 60% private
consumption, 16% government current expenditure, 24%
investment (1975); 2% real average annual growth (1975-77)
Agriculture: large areas devoted to livestock grazing; 60%
of area used for crops is planted in wheat; major products-
wool, livestock, wheat, fruits, sugarcane; self-sufficient in
food; caloric intake, 3,300 calories per day per capita
Fishing: catch 103,281 metric tons (1975); exports $94.5
million (FY75), imports $86.2 million (FY75)
Major industries: mining, industrial and transportation
equipment, food processing, chemicals
Crude steel: 7.8 million metric tons produced (FY76), 570
kg per capita
Electric power: 22,457,000 kW capacity (1977); 84.1
billion kWh produced (1977), 6,000 kWh per capita
Exports: $12.9 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal products
(1977)-44% agricultural products, 14% metalliferous ores,
13% wool, 12% coal
Imports: $11.6 billion (c.i.f., 1977); principal products
(1977)-41% manufactured raw materials, 28% capital
equipment, 25% consumer goods
Major trade partners: (1977) exports-34% Japan, 9%
U.S., 5% New Zealand, 4% U.K.; imports-21% U.S., 11%
U.K., 21% Japan
Aid: economic-Australian aid abroad $2.3 billion
(FY65-75); $430 million (FY75), 55% for Papua New Guinea
Budget: expenditures, A$26.7 billion; receipts A$24.4
billion (FY78)
Monetary conversion rate: 0.88 Australian dollar=US$1
(A$1=US$1.14), January 1978
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 40,636 km total; 9,197 km 1.60-meter gage,
13,394 km standard gage (1.435 m), 18,045 km 1.067-meter
gage; 800 km electrified (June 1962); government-owned
(except for few hundred kilometers of privately owned
track)
Highways: 837,866 km total (1976); 207,644 km paved,
205,454 km gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized soil surface,
424,768 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 8,368 km; mainly by small, shallow-
draft craft
Freight carried: rail-154.4 million metric tons
Ports: 12 major, numerous minor
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Pipelines: crude oil, 740 km; refined products, 340 km;
natural gas, 6,947 km
Civil air: around 120 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1,634 total, 1,566 usable; 198 with permanent-
surface runways, 2 with runways over 3,660 m; 19 with
runways 2,440-3,659 in, 642 with runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: very good international and do-
mestic service; 5.5 (39.5 per 100 popl.) million telephones;
204 AM stations, 5 FM stations, 112 TV stations and 66
repeaters; 3 earth satellite stations; submarine cables to New
Zealand, New Guinea, Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, and
Guam
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,551,000; 3,142,000 fit
for military service; 130,000 reach military age (17) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$2,577,300,000; about 8.8% of total central government
budget
FEDERAL
REPUBLIC
OF GERMANY
CZFCHOSLBVAKIA
r Vienna
AUSTRIA
LAND
83,916 km2; 20% cultivated, 26% meadows and pastures,
15% waste or urban, 38% forested, 1% inland water
Land boundaries: 2,582 km
PEOPLE
Population: 7,517,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.0% (1-77 to 1-78)
Nationality: noun-Austrian(s); adjective-Austrian
Ethnic divisions: 98.1% German, 0.7% Croatian, 0.3%
Slovene, 0.9% other
Religion: 85% Roman Catholic, 7% Protestant, 8% none or
other
Language: German
Literacy: 98%
Labor force: 2,784,635 (1977); 18% agriculture and
forestry, 49% industry and crafts, 18% trade and communi-
cations, 7% professions, 6% public service, 2% other; 2.4%
registered unemployed; an estimated 200,000 Austrians are
employed in other European countries; foreign laborers in
Austria number more than 200,000 (1972); unemployment
1.2% (September 1977)
Organized labor: about two-thirds of wage and salary
workers (1971)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Austria
Type: federal republic
Capital: Vienna
Political subdivisions:
capital
Legal system: civil law system with Roman law origin;
constitution adopted 1920, repromulgated in 1945; judicial
review of legislative acts by a Constitutional Court; separate
administrative and civil/penal supreme courts; legal educa-
tion at Universities of Vienna, Graz, Innsbruck, Salzburg,
and Linz; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 26 October
Branches: bicameral parliament, directly elected Presi-
dent whose functions are largely representational, independ-
ent federal judiciary
Government leaders: President Rudolf Kirchschlaeger,
Chancellor Bruno Kreisky leads a one-party Socialist
government
Suffrage: universal over age 19;
tial elections
Elections: presidential, every
parliamentary, every 4 years (next 1979)
Political parties and leaders: Socialist Party of Austria
(SPOe), Bruno Kreisky, Chairman; Austrian People's Party
(OeVP), Josef Taus, Chairman; Liberal Party (FPOe),
Friedrich Peter, Chairman; Communist Party, Franz Muhri,
Chairman
Voting strength (1975 election): 50.6% SPOe, 42.7%
OeVP, 5.3% FPOe, 1.2% Communist
Communists: membership 25,000
7,000-8,000
Other political or pressure groups: Federal Chamber of
Commerce and Industry; Austrian Trade Union Federation
(primarily Socialist); three composite leagues of the Austrian
Peoples Party (OeVP) representing business, labor, and
farmers; the OeVP-oriented League of Austrian Industrial-
ists; Roman Catholic Church, including its chief lay
organization, Catholic Action
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, ECE, EFTA,
EMA, ESRO (observer), FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC,
ICAO, IDA, IEA, IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc
Study Group, IMF, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Coun-
cil, OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO,
WSG
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ECONOMY
GNP: $47.8 billion (1977), $6,350 per capita; 59.2%
consumption, 28.1% investment, 11.3% government, 3.5%
stock building; -2.1% net foreign balance (1976 in 1964
prices); 1977 real GNP growth rate, 3.5%
Agriculture: livestock, cereals, potatoes, sugar beets; 84%
self-sufficient; caloric intake 3,230 calories per day per
capita (1969-70)
Major industries: foods, iron and steel, machinery,
textiles, chemicals, electrical, paper and pulp
Crude steel: 4.5 million metric tons produced (1976), 600
kg per capita (1976)
Electric power: 11.5 million kW capacity (1977); 38.3
billion kWh produced (1977), 5,100 kWh per capita
Exports: $9.8 billion (f.o.b., 1977 est.); iron and steel
products, machinery and equipment, lumber, textiles, paper
products, chemicals
Imports: $14.2 billion (c.i.f., 1977 est.); machinery and
equipment, chemicals, textiles and clothing, petroleum,
foodstuffs
Major trade partners: (1977 est.) 34.6% West Germany,
8.6% Italy, 8.1% Switzerland, 4.8% U.K., 3.7% France, 57.9%
EC; 12.5% EFTA; 10.9% Communist countries
Aid: bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and OOF),
$364 million (1970-76)
Budget: expenditures, $14.6 billion; revenues, $11.9
billion; deficit, $2.8 billion (1977 est.)
Monetary conversion rate: 16.53 shillings=US$1, 1977
average
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 6,517 km total; 5.877 km government-owned;
5,397 km standard gage (1.435 m) of which 2,730 km
electrified and 1,333 km double tracked; 480 km narrow
gage (0.760 m) of which 91 km electrified; 640 km privately
owned (1.435- and 1.000-meter gage)
Highways: approximately 33,600 km total national
classified network, including 10,400 km federal and 23,200
km provincial roads; about 20,800 km paved (bituminous,
concrete, stone block) and 12,800 km unpaved (gravel,
crushed stone, stabilized soil); additional 60,800 km commu-
nal roads (mostly gravel, crushed stone, earth)
Inland waterways: 427 km
Ports: 2 major river (Vienna, Linz)
Pipelines: 554 km crude oil; 2,611 km natural gas; 171 km
refined products
Civil air: 22 major transport aircraft, includes 1 leased in
Airfields: 51 total, 50 usable; 12 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 7 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: highly developed and efficient;
extensive TV and radiobroadcast systems with 90 AM, 94
FM, and 350 TV stations; 1 Comsat station U/C; 2.28 million
telephones (29.9 per 100 popl.)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,766,000; 1,495,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(19) annually about 62,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $693.5 million; about 4.0% of the federal budget
THE BAHAMAS
UNITED
STATES
LAND
11,396 km2; 1% cultivated, 29% forested, 70% built on,
wasteland, and other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 3,542 km (New Providence Is. 76 km)
PEOPLE
Population: 226,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.8% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Bahamian (sing., pl.); adjective-
Bahamian
Ethnic divisions: 80% Negro, 10% white, 10% mixed
Religion: Baptists 29%, Church of England 23%, Roman
Catholic 23%, smaller groups of other Protestant, Greek
Orthodox, and Jews
Language: English
Labor force: 84,228 (1976), 25% organized; 25% unem-
ployment (1977)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Commonwealth of The Bahamas
Type: independent commonwealth since July 1973,
recognizing Elizabeth II as Chief of State
Capital: Nassau (New Providence Island)
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BAHAMAS
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Legal system: based on English law
National holiday: Independence Day, 10 July
Branches: bicameral legislature (appointed Senate,
elected House); executive (Prime Minister and cabinet);
judiciary
Government leaders: Prime Minister Lynden O. Pindling
Suffrage: universal over age 18; registered voters (July
1977) 73,309
Elections: House of Assembly (19 July 1977); next
election due constitutionally in 5 years
Political parties and leaders: Progressive Liberal Party
(PLP), predominantly black, Lynden O. Pindling; Bahamian
Democratic Party (BDP), Henry Bostwick; Free National
Movement (FNM), Cecil Wallace-Whitfield
Voting strength (1977 election): PLP (55%) 30 seats, BDP
(27%) 6 seats, FNM (15%) 2 seats, others (3%) 0 seats
Communists: none known
Member of: CDB, G-77, IBRD, IDB, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
U.N., WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $698 million (at market prices, 1976), $3,390 per
capita; real growth rate 1976, 4.8%
Agriculture: food importer, main crops-fish, fruits,
vegetables
Major industries: tourism, cement, oil refining, lumber,
salt production, rum
Electric power: 250,000 kW capacity (1977); 680 million
kWh produced (1977), 3,320 kWh per capita
Exports: $2.6 billion (f.o.b.,1976); fuel oil, pharmaceuti-
cals, cement, rum
Imports: $2.9 billion (c.i.f., 1976); crude oil, foodstuffs,
manufactured goods
Major trade partners: exports-U.S. 86%, U.K. 2%,
Canada 2%; imports-U.S. 24%, Libya 20%, Nigeria 16%
(1973)
Aid: economic-authorizations from U.S. (FY56-76), $0.3
million in grants; from international organizations
(FY71-76), $12 million
Budget: (1977) revenues, $152 million; recurrent expendi-
tures, $168 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Bahamian dollar
(B$1)=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 2,100 km total; 850 km paved, 1,250 km
gravel
Ports: 2 major (Freeport, Nassau), 9 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport aircraft (including 2 leased in)
Airfields: 54 total, 51 usable; 10 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 22 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 4 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: telecom facilities highly developed,
including 58,000 telephones (27.5 per 100 popl.) in totally
automatic system; tropospheric scatter link with Florida; 3
AM, 2 FM stations and 1 TV station; 3 coaxial submarine
cables
BAHRAIN
LAND
596 km2 plus group of 32 smaller islands; 5% cultivated,
negligible forested area, remainder desert, waste, or urban
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 161 km
PEOPLE
Population: 284,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.5% (7-75 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Bahraini(s); adjective-Bahraini
Ethnic divisions: 90% Arab, 7% Iranian, Pakistani, and
Indian, 3% other; native Bahrainis are a minority
Religion: Muslim
Language: Arabic, English also widely spoken
Literacy: about 40% (1970)
Labor force: 78,507 (1976)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Bahrain
Type: traditional monarchy; independence declared in
1971
Capital: Manama
Legal system: based on Islamic law and English common
law; constitution went into effect December 1973
National holiday: 16 December
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BAHRAIN/ BANGLADESH
Branches: Amir rules with help of a cabinet led by Prime
Minister; a National Assembly, made up of cabinet and 30
directly elected members, was formed in early 1974; Amir
dissolved assembly in August 1975 and suspended the
constitutional provision for election of the assembly
Government leader: Amir `Isa ibn Salman Al-Khalifah
Political parties and pressure groups: political parties
prohibited; no significant pressure groups although numer-
ous small clandestine groups are active
Communists: negligible
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto),
WHO
IBRD, ICAO, IMF, NAM, OAPEC, U.N., UNESCO,
Telecommunications: excellent international telecom-
munications; limited domestic services; 31,000 telephones
(11.6 per 100 popl.); 1 AM station, 1 TV station, 1 Indian
Ocean satellite station; tropospheric scatter and microwave
to Qatar and United Arab Emirates
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 64,000; fit for
service, 37,000
Supply: mostly from U.K.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending
1978; $42.8 million, 6% of total budget
ECONOMY
GNP: $600 million (1976 est.), annual growth rate 4.1%
(1975-85 projected average), $2,480 per capita, dominated
by oil industry; 1977 average daily crude oil production,
56,000 bbls (oil expected to last 15 years if no new
discoveries are made); 1975 nonassociated natural gas
production, 102 billion ft2; government oil revenues for 1976
are estimated at $395.7 million
Agriculture: produces dates, self-sufficient vegetables; edairy and
poultry farming; fishing; not
Major industries: petroleum refining, aluminum smelt-
ing, boatbuilding, shrimp fishing, pearls and sailmaking on a
small scale; major development projects include flourmill,
and ISA town; OAPEC dry dock to be9 built 2 y billion
(1977);
Electric power: 550,000 kW capacity
kWh produced (1977), 7,520 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,346 million (f.o.b., 1976); non-oil exports
(including reexports), $428.7 million (1977 projected); oil
exports, $1,000 million (1976)
Imports: $1,668 million (c.i.f., 1976)
Major trade partners: Saudi Arabia, U.K., U S., Japan,
EC
Aid: received $110 million in bilateral commitments and
committed itself $8.5 million to multilateral agencies in
CY74
Budget: (1976) $489 million, 72% of revenues from oil
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Bahrain dinar=US$2.52
(since January 1973)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 93 km bituminous surfaced; undetermined
mileage of natural surface tracks
Ports: 1 major (Bahrain)
Pipelines: crude oil, 56 km; refined products, 16 km;
natural gas, 32 km
Civil air: 18 major transport aircraft, including 3 leased in
and 1 leased out (all registered in Oman)
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; I with permanent-surface runway 1,220-
2,439 1 with runway over 3,660 m;
2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
BANGLADESH
LAND
142,500 km2; 66% arable (including cultivated and
fallow), 18% not available for cultivation, 16% forested
Land boundaries: 2,535 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm; fishing 200
nm
Coastline: 580 km
PEOPLE 1978), annual
Population: 85,771,000 (July ,
growth rate 2.7% (current) djective-Bangla
Nationality: noun-Bangladeshi(s); a
desk
Ethnic divisions: predominantly Bengali; fewer than 1
million "Biharis" and fewer than 1 million tribals
Religion: about 83% Muslim, 16% Hindu; less than 1%
Buddhist and other
Language: Bengali
Literacy: about 25%
Labor force: over 26 million; extensive underemploy-
ment; over 80% of labor force is in agriculture
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BANGLADESH/BARBADOS
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of Bangladesh
Type: independent republic since December 1971; Gov-
ernment of President Sheikh Mujibur Rahman overthrown
in August 1975; two other coups followed; country currently
governed by a military president who is also chief martial
law administrator and his council of civilian advisers
Capital: Dacca
Political subdivisions: 19 districts, 413 thanas (counties),
4,053 unions (village groupings)
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
adopted December 1972; amended January 1975 to more
authoritarian presidential system, changed by proclamation
in April 1977 to reflect Islamic character of nation
National holiday: Independence Day, 26 March
Branches: constitution provides for unicameral legisla-
hrre, strong president; controlled judiciary; parliament
dissolved by current regime
Government leader: President Ziaur Rahman
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: First Parliament (House of the Nation) elected
in March 1973; elections every 5 years; Government is
expected to lift ban on political activity before presidential
election in early June; a separate parliamentary election is
planned for November 1978; current President given
mandate to continue his rule in nationwide referendum held
in May 1977
Communists: 2,500 members (est.)
Other political or pressure groups: 15 political parties
legalized by government as of October 1976, student groups,
bands of former guerrillas
Member of: ADB, Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Organi-
zation, Colombo Plan, Commonwealth, ESCAP, G-77,
GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IMF, ILO, NAM, U. [V.,
UNCTAD, UNESCO, UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $6.5 billion est. (FY77, current prices), $78 per
capita; real growth, 2.6% (FY77), 9.2% (FY76)
Agriculture: large subsistence farming, heavily dependent
on monsoon rainfall; main crops are jute and rice;
shortages-grain, cotton, and oilseeds
Fishing: catch 640,000 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: jute manufactures, food processing and
cotton textiles
Electric power: 915,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.6 billion
kWh produced (1977), 20 kWh per capita
Exports: $474 million (FY77); raw and manufactured jute,
leather, tea
Imports: $860 million (FY77); foodgrains, fuels, raw
cotton, fertilizer, manufactured products
Major trade partners: exports-U.S. 17%, U.K. 7.4%;
imports-U
S
28
5%
.
.
.
, Canada 9.7% (FY76)
Budget: (FY76) domestic revenues, $692 million; expend-
itures, $1,489 million
Monetary conversion rate: 14.26 taka=US$1 (January
1978)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,470 km total; 2,483 km meter gage (1.000 m),
953 km broad gage (1.676 m), 35 km narrow gage (0.762 m),
290 km double track; government-owned
Highways: 44,930 km total; 4,044 km paved, 2,022 kin
gravel, 38,864 km earth
Inland waterways: 7,000 km; river steamers navigate
main waterways
Ports: I major; 5 minor
Pipelines: 150 km natural gas
Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 24 total, 16 usable; 18 with permanent surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 8 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: adequate international radiocom-
munications and landline service; fair domestic wire and
microwave service; fair broadcast service; 100,000 (est. )
telephones (0.1 per 100 pop].); 8 AM, I FM, 3 TV stations,
and 1 ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 18,237,000; 10,498,000
fit for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$152.0 million; about 9.4% of the central government budget
BARBADOS
LAND
430 km2; 60% cropped, 10% permanent meadows, 30%
built on, waste, other
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BARBADOS /BELGIUM
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 97 km
PEOPLE
Population: 258,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.5% (1-76 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Barbadian(s);, adjective-Barbadian
Ethnic divisions: 80% African, 17% mixed, 4% European
Religion: Anglican (70%), Roman Catholic, Methodist,
and Moravian
Language: English
Literacy: over 90%
Labor force: 97,000 (1973 est.)
unemployment 20-25% (1976)
Organized labor: 32%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Barbados
Type: independent sovereign state within the Common-
wealth since November 1966, recognizing Elizabeth II as
Chief of State
Capital: Bridgetown
Political subdivisions: 11 parishes and city of Bridgetown
Legal system: English common law; constitution came
into effect upon independence in 1966; no judicial review of
legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 30 November
Branches: legislature consisting of a 21-member
pointed Senate and a 24-member elected House
Assembly; cabinet headed by Prime Minister
Government leader: Prime Minister J. M.
Adams
Suffrage: universal over age 18
ap-
of
Elections: House of Assembly members have terms no
longer than 5 years; last general election held 2 September
1976
Political parties and leaders: Barbados Labor
(BLP), J. M. G. "Tom" Adams; Democratic Labor
(DLP), Errol Barrow
Voting strength (1976 election): Barbados Labor
Party
Party
(BLP), 53%; Democratic Labor Party, 46%; Independent,
negligible; House of Assembly seats-BLP 17, DLP 7
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: People's Progressive
Movement (PPM), a small black-nationalist group led by
Calvin Alleyne
Member of: CARICOM, Commonwealth, FAO, G-77,
GATT, IADB, IBRD, ICAO, IDB, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ISO,
ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council, OAS, SELA,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $396 million (1976), $1,370 per capita; real growth
rate 1976, 6.2%
Agriculture: main products-sugarcane, subsistence foods
Major industries: tourism, sugar milling, light manu-
facturing
Electric power: 107,000 kW capacity (1977); 220 million
kWh produced (1977), 920 kWh per capita
Exports: $208 million (f.o.b., 1976); sugar and
byproducts, clothing
Imports: $275 million (c.i.f., 1976); foodstuffs, machinery,
manufactured goods
Major trade partners: exports-28% U.K., 14% U.S., 28%
CARIFTA, 30% other; imports-25% U.K., 21% U.S., 11%
Canada, 13% CARIFTA, 30% other (1973)
Aid: economic-authorization from U.S. (FY67-76), $1.4
million; from international organizations (FY63-76), $31.9
million
Budget: (1976) revenues, $152 million; expenditures, $191
million
Monetary
conversion rate: 2 Barbados dollars=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 1,370 km total; 1,290 km paved, and 80 km
gravel, and earth
Ports: 1 major (Bridgetown), 2 minor
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1 with permanent-surface runway 2,440-3,659
m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: islandwide automatic telephone
system with 44,000 telephones (17.8 per 100 popl.);
tropospheric scatter link to Trinidad; UHF/VHF links to St.
Vincent and St. Lucia; 2 AM stations, 1 FM station, 1 TV
station; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 58,000; 42,000 fit for
military service; average number reaching military age (18)
annually, 3,000; no conscription
BELGIUM
LAND
30,562 km2; 28% cultivated, 24% meadow and pasture,
28% waste, urban, or other; 20% forested
Land boundaries: 1,377 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 64 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 9,835,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Belgian(s); adjective-Belgian
Ethnic divisions: 55% Flemings, 33% Walloons, 12%
mixed or other
Religion: 97% Roman Catholic, 3% none or other
Language: French, Flemish (Dutch), German, in small
area of eastern Belgium; divided along ethnic lines
Literacy: 97%
Labor force: 4.04 million; approximately 95% is found in
the following sectors: 32% manufacturing, 24% services, 16%
commerce, banking, and insurance, 8% construction, 7.5%
transportation and communication, 3.4% agriculture, for-
estry, and fishing, 1.2% mining, 0.8% public utilities and
sanitary services (1972); 9.7% of insured workers and 7.2% of
the total work force unemployed, March 1978
Organized labor: 48% of labor force (1969)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Belgium
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Brussels
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces
Legal system: civil law system influenced by English
constitutional theory; constitution adopted 1831, since
amended; judicial review of legislative acts; legal education
at 4 law schools; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with
reservations
National holiday: National Day, 21 July
Branches: executive branch consists of King and cabinet;
cabinet responsible to bicameral parliament; independent
judiciary; coalition governments are usual
Government leader: Head of State, King Baudouin;
Prime Minister Leo Tindemans
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: held 17 April 1977 (held at least once every 4
years)
Political parties and leaders: Social Christian, Georges
Gramme and Wilfred Martens, co-presidents; Socialist,
Andre Cools and Karl Van Miert, co-presidents; Liberal,
Pierre Dechamps, national president; Brussels Liberal, Basile
Risopoulos, party president; Francophone Democratic Front,
Andre Lagasse, party president; Walloon Rally, Paul-Henri
Gendebien, party president; Volksunie (Flemish nationalist),
Hugo Schiltz, party president; Communist, Louis Van Gent,
president of political bureau
Voting strength (1977 election): 80 seats Social Christian,
62 seats Socialist, 31 seats Liberal, 20 seats Volksunie, 10
seats Francophone Democratic Front, 5 seats Walloon Rally,
2 seats Brussels Liberal, 2 seats Communist
Communists: 10,000 members (est.)
Other political or pressure groups: Christian and Socialist
Trade Unions; the Federation of Belgium Industries;
numerous other associations representing bankers, manufac-
turers, middle-class artisans, and the legal and medical
professions; two major organizations represent the cultural
interests of Flanders and Wallonia
Member of: ADB, Benelux, BLEU, Council of Europe,
DAC, EC, ECE, ECOSOC, ECSC, EEC, EIB, ELDO, EMA,
ESRO, EURATOM, FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC,
ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC, ILO, International Lead and
Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITC, ITU,
NATO, OAS (observer), OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WEU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $75 billion (1977), $7,642 per capita; 59%
consumption, 23.8% investment, 14.9% government, 2.2%
stock building, 0.4% net foreign balance (1975); 2.9% real
growth rate in 1976
Agriculture: livestock production predominates; main
crops-grains, beets, potatoes; 80% self-sufficient in food;
caloric intake, 3,230 calories per day per capita (1969-70)
Fishing: exports $37 million (1975), imports $178 million
(1975)
Major industries: engineering and metal products,
processed food and beverages, chemicals, basic metals,
textiles, and petroleum
Crude steel: 12.1 million metric tons produced; 1,240 kg
per capita (1976)
Electric power: 11,451,000 kW capacity (1977); 48 billion
kWh produced (1977), 4,885 kWh per capita
Exports: (Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union) $37.0
billion (f.o.b., 1976); iron and steel products, finished or
semifinished precious stones, textile products
Imports: (Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union) $39.3
billion (c.i.f., 1976); nonelectrical machinery, motor vehicles,
textiles, chemicals
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Major trade partners: (Belgium-Luxembourg Economic
Union, 1976) 71% EC (21.5% West Germany, 16.9% France,
15.6% Netherlands, 9.1% U.K., 4.0% Italy), 6.3% U.S.
Aid: bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and OOF),
$1,580 million (1970-76)
Budget: (1976) revenues, $20.3 billion; expenditures,
$24.3 billion; deficit, $3.5 billion
Monetary conversion rate: (1977 average) Belgian Franc
36.36=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,394 km total; 4,117 km standard gage (1.435
m) and government-owned, 2,536 km double track, 1,224
km electrified; 277 km privately owned, electrified meter
gage (1.000 m)
Highways: 104,607 km total; 1,046 km paved, limited
access, divided autoroute; 51,780 km other paved; 51,781 km
unpaved
Inland waterways: 2,043 km, of which 1,528 km are in
regular use by commercial transport
Ports: 5 major, 1 minor
Pipelines: refined products, 965 km; crude, 161 km;
natural gas, 3,218 km
Civil air: 56 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased in
and 8 leased out)
Airfields: 46 total, 45 usable; 22 with permanent-surface
runways; 13 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 5 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: excellent domestic and interna-
tional telephone and telegraph facilities; 2.95 million
telephones (30.0 per 100 pop,.); 14 AM, 21 FM, and 25 TV
stations; 5 coaxial submarine cables; 1 Atlantic Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,243,000; 1,803,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(19) annually 76,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $2.3 billion; about 7% of proposed central
government budget
BELIZE
(formerly British Honduras)
LAND
22,973 km2; 38% agricultural (5% cultivated), 46%
exploitable forest, 16% urban, waste, water, offshore islands
or other
Land boundaries: 515 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 386 km
PEOPLE
Population: 152,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Belizean(s); adjective-Belizean
Ethnic divisions: 51% Negro, 22% mestizo, 19% Amerin-
dian, 8% other
Religion: 50% Roman Catholic; Anglican, Seventh-day
Adventist, Methodist, Baptist, Jehovah's Witnesses, Men-
nonite
Language: English, Spanish, Maya, and Carib
Literacy: 70%-80%
Labor force: 34,500; 39% agriculture, 14% manufactur-
ing, 8% commerce, 12% construction and transport, 20%
services, 7% other; shortage of skilled labor and all types of
technical personnel; over 15% are unemployed
Organized labor: 8% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Belize
Type: internal self-governing British colony
Capital: Belmopan
Legal system: English law; constitution came into force in
1964, although country remains a British colony
Branches: 18-member elected National Assembly and
8-member Senate (either house may choose its speaker or
president, respectively, from outside its elected member-
ship); cabinet; judiciary
Government leader: Premier George Price
Suffrage: universal adult (probably 21)
Elections: must be held within 5 years of last elections
held in October 1974
Political parties and leaders:
(PUP), George Price; United Democratic Party (UDP), a
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coalition comprised of the National Independence Party
(NIP) led by Philip Goldson, the People's Democratic Union
(PDM) led by Dean Lindo, and the Liberal Party (LP) led
by Harry Lawrence; Corozal United Front (CUF), San-
tiago Ricalde; United Black Association for Development
(UBAD), Evan X. Hyde
Voting strength (National Assembly): PUP 12 seats, UDP
6 seats
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: Christian Workers'
Union (CWU) which is connected with PUP
Member of: CARICOM, ISO
ECONOMY
GDP: $96 million (1975), $749 per capita; 78% private
consumption, 17% public consumption, 36% domestic
investment, -31% net foreign balance (1968); 3.5% real
growth rate (1971)
Agriculture: main products-sugarcane, citrus fruits,
corn, molasses, rice, beans, bananas, livestock products; net
importer of food; caloric intake, 2,500 calories per day per
capita
Major industries: timber and forest products, food
processing, furniture, rum, soap
Electric power: 16,000 kW capacity (1977); 32 million
kWh produced (1977), 215 kWh per capita
Exports: $73 million (f.o.b., 1975); sugar, molasses,
clothing, lumber, citrus fruits, fish
Imports: $86 million (c.i.f., 1975); vehicles, building
materials, petroleum, food, textiles, machinery
Major trade partners: exports-U.S. 30%, U.K. 24%,
Mexico 22%, Canada 13%; imports-U.S. 34%, U.K. 25%,
Jamaica 7% (1970)
Aid: economic-U.S. authorizations (FY46-76), $7.6 mil-
lion in grants; from international organizations (1946-76),
$2.3 million
Monetary conversion rate: 2 Belize dollars=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 2,450 km total; 300 km paved, 900 km gravel,
950 km improved earth and 300 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 800 km river network used by
shallow-draft craft
Ports: 1 major (Belize), 4 minor
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 37 total, 37 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: 5,600 telephones in automatic and
manual network (4.3 per 100 popl.); radio-relay system; 6
AM stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 32,000; 19,000 fit for
military service; 1,700 reach military age (18) annually
BENIN
(formerly Dahomey)
LAND
115,773 kmz; southern third of country is most fertile;
arable land 80% (actually cultivated 11%), forests and game
preserves 19%, non-arable 1%
Land boundaries: 1,963 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm (100 urn
mineral exploitation limit)
Coastline: 121 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,376,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (7-70 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Beninese (sing. & pl.); adjective-
Beninese
Ethnic divisions: 99% Africans (42 ethnic groups, most
important being Fon, Adja, Yoruba, Bariba), 5,500
Europeans
Religion: 12% Muslim, 8% Christian,
Language: French official;
common vernaculars in south,
languages in north
Literacy: about 20%
Fon and Yoruba
at least 6 major
most
tribal
Labor force: 85% of labor force engaged in agriculture;
15% civil service, artisans, and industry
Organized labor: approximately 75% of wage earners,
divided among two major and several minor unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of Benin
Type: party state, under military rule since 26 October
1972
Capital: Porto-Novo (official), Cotonou (de facto)
Political subdivisions: 6 provinces, 46 districts
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Legal system: based on French civil law and customary
law; legal education generally obtained in France; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 30 November
Branches: National Revolutionary Council, Council of
Ministers, Central Committee of Party
Government leader: Lt. Col. Mathieu Kerekou, President,
and Chief of State, Charged with National Defense
Suffrage: suspended
Elections: current government has held no elections and
none are scheduled
Political parties: People's Revolutionary Party of Benin
established in 1975
Communists: sole party espouses Marxism-Leninism
Member of: AFDB, CEAO, EAMA, ECA, ECOWAS,
Entente, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF,
ITU, NAM, Niger River Commission, OAU, OCAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $660 million (1977 est.), $200 per capita; no real
growth during 1970-1974
Agriculture: major cash crop is oil palms; peanuts, cotton,
coffee, sheanuts, and tobacco also produced commercially;
main food crops-corn, cassava, yams, sorghum and millet;
livestock, fish
Fishing: catch 21,415 metric tons (1976); exports 600
metric tons, imports 8,875 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: palm oil and palm kernel oil processing
Electric power: 11,000 kW capacity (1977); 55 million
kWh produced (1977), 20 kWh per capita
Exports: $106 million (f.o.b., 1977); palm products (34%);
other agricultural products
Imports: $264 million (c.i.f., 1977); clothing and other
consumer goods, cement, lumber, fuels, foodstuffs, machin-
ery, and transport equipment
Major trade partners: France, EC, franc zone; preferen-
tial tariffs to EC and franc zone countries
Aid: economic (through FY75)-EC, $67.1 million; U.N.,
$12.5 million; other international organizations, $36.2
million; Taiwan, $1 million; U.S. (FY46-76), $18.1 million;
China, $44 million extended (1972)
Budget: 1977 est.-receipts $110 million, expenditures
$109 million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine (CFA) francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 579 km, all meter gage
Highways: 3,303 km total; 705 km
improved earth
(1.00 m)
paved, 2,598 km
Inland waterways: 645 km navigable
Ports: 1 major (Cotonou), 1 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 10 total, 10 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 4 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: system of open wire and radio
relay; 9,900 telephones (0.3 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, 1 FM, and
no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 752,000; 377,000 fit for
military service; about 33,000 males and 32,000 females
reach military age (18) annually; both sexes liable for
military service
Supply: dependent on France and Guinea; aid from North
Korea and PRC is pending
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $7.4 million; about 11% of central government budget
BERMUDA
LAND
54.4 kmz; 8% arable, 60% forested, 21% built on,
wasteland, and other, 11% leased for air and naval bases
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 103 km
PEOPLE
Population: 57,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.2% (7-70 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Bermudan(s); adjective-Bermudan
Ethnic divisions: approximately 63% African, 37% white
Religion: 47.5% Church of England, 38.2% other Protes-
tant, 10.2% Catholic, 4.1% other
Language: English
Literacy: virtually 100%
Labor force: 25,200 (1975)
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GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Colony of Bermuda
Type: British colony
Capital: Hamilton
Political subdivisions: 9 parishes
Legal system: English law
Branches: Executive Council (cabinet) appointed by
governor, led by government leader; bicameral legislature
with an appointed Legislative Council, and a 40-member
directly elected House of Assembly
Government leaders: Governor, Sir Peter Ramsbotham;
Premier, J. David Gibbons
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: at least once every 5 years; last general election,
May 1976
Political parties and leaders: United Bermuda Party
(UBP), J. David Gibbons; Progressive Labor Party (PLP),
Lois Browne Evans
Voting strength (1976 elections): UBP 55.5%, PLP 44.4%;
House of Assembly seats-UBP 26%, PLP 14%
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: Bermuda Industrial
Union (BIU)
ECONOMY
GNP: $300-$350 million (at
$5,000-$6,000 per capita
Agriculture: main products-bananas,
lilies, dairy products, citrus fruits
Major industries: tourism, finance
Electric power: 86,200 kW capacity (1977); 300
kWh produced (1977), 5,260 kWh per capita
Exports: $34 million (f.o.b., 1975); mostly reexports of
drugs and bunker fuel
Imports: $162 million (f.o.b., 1975); fuel, foodstuffs,
machinery
Major trade partners: 45% U.S., 22% U.K., 9% Canada
(1974)
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Bermuda dollar=US$1
Fiscal year: I April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 190 km, all paved
Ports: 3 major (Hamilton, St. George Freeport, Ireland
island)
Civil air: 3 major
Airfields: 1 with concrete runway 2,960 m; I seaplane
station
Telecommunications: modern
fully automatic telephone system
100 popl.); 3 AM, 1 FM, and
submarine cables
telecom system, includes
with 38,600 sets (66.6 per
2 TV stations; 3 coaxial
LAND
46,600 km2; 15% agricultural, 15% desert, waste, urban,
70% forested
Land boundaries: about 870 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,262,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.5% (current)
Nationality:
Bhutanese
BHUTAN
(sing., pl.); adjective-
Ethnic divisions: 60% Bhotias, 25%
indigenous or migrant tribes
Religion: 75% Lamaistic
influenced Hinduism
Buddhism, 25% Buddhist-
Language: Bhotias speak various Tibetan
widely spoken dialect is Dzongkha, the official
Nepalese speak various Nepalese dialects
Literacy: insignificant
Labor force: 300,000; 99%
massive lack of skilled labor
language;
agriculture, 1% industry;
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Bhutan
Type: monarchy; special treaty relationship with
Capital: Thimphu
Political subdivisions: 4 regions (east, central,
south), further divided into 15-18 subdivisions
Legal system: based on Indian law and English common
law; in 1964 the monarch assumed full power-no
constitution existed beforehand; a Supreme Court hears
appeals from district administrators;
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 17 December
Branches: appointed Minister and
Assembly consisting of village elders, monastic representa-
tives, and all district and senior government administrators
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Government leader: King Jigme Singhi Wangchuk
Suffrage: each family has one vote
Elections: popular elections on village level held every 3
years
Political parties: all parties illegal
Communists: no overt Communist presence
Other political or pressure groups: Buddhist clergy
Member of: Colombo Plan, G-77, NAM, UPU, U.N.
ECONOMY
GNP: $90 million (1976); $70 per capita
Agriculture: rice, barley, wheat, potatoes, fruit
Major industries: handicrafts (particularly textiles)
Electric power: 3,000 kW capacity (1977); 8 million kWh
produced (1977), 10 kWh per capita
Exports: about $1 million annually; rice, dolomite, and
handicrafts
Imports: about $1.4 million annually
Major trading partner: India
Aid: economic-India (FY61-72), $180 million
Monetary conversion rate: both ngultrums and Indian
rupees are legal tender; 8.77 ngultrums=8.77 Indian
rupees=US$1 as of October 1975
Fiscal year. 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 1,304 km total; 418 km surfaced, 515 km
improved, 371 km unimproved earth
Freight carried: not available, very light traffic
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 2 total, 1 asphalt runway 1,372 m, and 1 with
concrete runway 899 m
Telecommunications: facilities inadequate; 1,000 tele-
phones (0.1 per 100 popl.); 6,000 est. radio sets; no TV sets; 1
AM station and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 293,000; 155,000 fit for
military service; about 13,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Supply: dependent on India
LAND
1,098,160 km2; 2% cultivated and fallow, 11% pasture and
meadow, 45% urban, desert, waste, or other, 40% forest, 2%
inland water
Land boundaries: 6,083 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,081,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (current)
1?E hlJ -RAI
Pacific
Ocean
Nationality: noun-Bolivian(s); adjective-Bolivian
Ethnic divisions: 50%-75% Indian, 20%-35% mestizo,
5%-15% white
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic; active Protes-
tant minority, especially Methodist
Language: Spanish, Aymara, Quechua
Literacy: 35%-40%
Labor force: 2.8 million (1977); 70% agriculture, 3%
mining, 10% services and utilities, 7% manufacturing, 10%
other
Organized labor: 150,000-200,000, concentrated in min-
ing, industry, construction, and transportation
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Bolivia
Type: republic; de facto military dictatorship government
Capital: La Paz (seat of government); Sucre (legal capital
and seat of judiciary)
Political subdivisions: 9 departments with limited
autonomy
Legal system: based on Spanish law and Code Napoleon;
constitution adopted 1967; constitution in force except
where contrary to dispositions dictated by governments since
1969; legal education at University of San Andres and
several others; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 6 August
Branches: executive; congress of two chambers (Senate
and Chamber of Deputies), congress disbanded after 26
September 1969 ouster of President Siles; judiciary
Government leaders: President Maj. Gen. Hugo Banzer
Suarez
Suffrage: universal and compulsory at age 18 if married,
21 if single
Elections: presidential and congressional elections sched-
uled for 9 July 1978, Bolivia's first elections in 12 years;
President Banzer would like to postpone them but the
military seems to favor proceeding with the electoral process
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Political parties and leaders: ban on political parties was
lifted in December 1977, but party activity is disorganized
so far; the two traditional political parties in Bolivia are the
Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (MNR) and the Boliv-
ian Socialist Phalange (FSB), both are seriously factionalized;
Bolivian Socialist Falange; (Mario Gutierrez); Nationalist
Revolutionary Movement of the People (Jaime Arellano);
Nationalist Revolutionary Movement of Left (Hernan Siles
Zuazo); Authentic Revolutionary Party (Walter Guevara
Arce); Christian Democratic Party (Benjamin Miguel);
Nationalist Revolutionary Party of Left (Juan Lachin
Oquendo); Paz Estenssorista MNR (Leonidas Sanchez)
Voting strength (1966 elections): Frente de la Revolucion
Boliviana (a coalition composed of the MPC, PIR, PRA,
PSD, and two interest groups, the campesinos and Chaco
War Veterans) 61%, FSB 12%, MNR 10%, of her 17%
Communists: three parties; PCB/Soviet led by Jorge Kolle
Cueto, about 300 members; PCB/Chinese led by Oscar
Zamora, 150 (including 100 in exile); POR (Trotskyist),
about 50 members divided between three factions led by
Hugo Gonzalez Moscoso, Guillermo Lora Escobar, and
Amadeo Arze
Member of: FAO, G-77, IAEA, IADB, IATP, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-
International Wheat Council, LAFTA and Andean Sub-Re-
gional Group (created in May 1969 within LAFTA), OAS,
SELA, U.N., UNESCO, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $3.5 billion (1977, in 1977 dollars), $600 per capita;
69% private consumption, 17% public consumption, 20%
gross domestic investment, -6% net foreign balance (1976);
real growth rate (1972-76), average 6.4%; 1976 growth, 6.0%
Agriculture: main crops-potatoes, corn, rice, sugarcane,
yucca, bananas; imports significant quantities of wheat;
caloric intake, 70% of requirements (1976)
Major industries: mining, smelting, petroleum refining,
food processing, textiles, and clothing
Electric power: 367,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 277 kWh per capita
Exports: $640 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); tin, petroleum,
lead, zinc, silver, tungsten, antimony, bismuth, gold, coffee,
sugar, cotton, natural gas
Imports: $670 million (c.i.f., 1977); foodstuffs, chemicals,
capital goods, pharmaceuticals, transportation
Major trade partners: exports-Western Europe, 19% (of
which UK is largest market); Latin America, 38%; U.S., 30%;
Japan, 3.9%; imports-U.S., 24%; Western Europe, 15.4% (of
which West Germany is largest supplier); Japan, 15.7%;
Latin America, 33.6% (1975)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $335
million in loans, $342 million in grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $372 million; from other Western
countries (1960-75), $53.8 million; Communist countries
(1970-74), $59.7 million; military-assistance from U.S.
(FY52-76), $70 million
Budget: $474 million revenues, $583 million expenditures
(1978)
Monetary conversion rate: 20 pesos=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,572 km total, goverment owned, single track;
3,540 km meter gage (1.000 m), 32 km 0.760-meter gage; in
addition, 96 km meter gage (1.000 m) privately owned
Highways: 37,300 km total; 1,150 km paved, 6,550 km
gravel, 5,950 km improved earth, 23,650 km unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: officially estimated to be 10,000 km
of commercially navigable waterways
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,670 km; refined products, 1,495
km; natural gas, 580 km
Ports: none (Bolivian cargo moved through Arica and
Antofagasta, Chile, and Matarani, Peru)
Civil air: 38 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 576 total, 536 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 6 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 128 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: radio-relay system from La Paz-to
Santa Cruz; improved international services; 55,000 tele-
phones (1.2 per 100 popl.); 122 AM, 18 FM, and 5 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49,
for military service; average number
(19) annually about 60,000
1,319,000; 834,000 fit
reaching military age
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year
December 1978, $90.2 million; about 13.2%
government budget
LAND
569,800 km'; about 6%
cultivation, mostly desert
Land boundaries: 3,774
ending 31
of central
PEOPLE
Population: 750,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Botswana
adjective-Botswana
Ethnic divisions: 94% Tswana, 5% Bushmen, 1%
pean
Religion: 85% animist, 15% Christian
Language: Africans speak Tswana vernacular
Literacy: about 22% in English; about 32% in Tswana; less
than 1% secondary school graduates
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ocean
Labor force: 385,000; most are engaged in cattle raising
and subsistence agriculture; about 51,000 in internal cash
economy, another 60,000 spend at least 6 to 9 months per
year as wage earners in South Africa (1971)
Organized labor: eight trade unions organized with a total
membership of approximately 9,000 (1972 est.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Botswana
Type: parliamentary republic; independent member of
Commonwealth since 1966
Capital: Gaborone
Political subdivisions: 12 administrative districts
Legal system: based on Roman-Dutch law and local
customary law; constitution came into effect 1966; judicial
review limited to matters of interpretation; legal education
at University of Botswana and Swaziland (2' years) and
University of Edinburgh (2 years); has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 30 September
Branches: executive-President appoints and presides
over the cabinet which is responsible to Legislative
Assembly; legislative-Legislative Assembly with 32 popu-
larly elected members and 4 members elected by the 32
representatives, House of Chiefs with deliberative powers
only; judicial-local courts administer customary law, High
Court and subordinate courts have criminal jurisdiction over
all residents, Court of Appeal has appellate jurisdiction
Government leader: President Seretse Khama
Suffrage: universal, age 21 and over
Elections: general elections held 26 October 1974
Political parties and leaders: Botswana Democratic Party
(BDP), Seretse Khama; Botswana National Front (BNF),
Kenneth Koma; Bechuanaland People's Party (BPP), Philip
Matante; Botswana Independence Party (BIP), Motsamai
Mpho
Voting strength: (October 1974 election) BDP (27 seats);
BPP (2 seats); BNF (2 seats); BIP (1 seat)
Communists: no known Communist organization; Koma
of BNF has long history of Communist contacts
Member of: AFDB, Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT
(de facto), IBRD, IDA, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N., UPU,
W M0
ECONOMY
GDP: $300 million (1975 est.), growth in constant prices,
less than 5% in 1977
Agriculture: principal crops are corn and sorghum;
livestock raised and exported
Major industries: livestock processing, mining of dia-
monds, copper, nickel, and coal
Electric power: 75,000 kW capacity (1977); 85 million
kWh produced (1977), 120 kWh per capita
Exports: $176 million (1976); cattle, animal products,
minerals
Imports: $209 million (1976); foodstuffs, vehicles, textiles,
petroleum products
Major trade partners: South Africa and U.K.
Budget: (1977) revenue $107 million ($78 million from
domestic taxes and $29 million from borrowing and foreign
aid), current expenditures $70 million, investment expendi-
tures $44 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 pula=about US$1.20 as of
October 1977
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 691 km 1.067-meter gage
Highways: 10,219 km total; 438 km paved; 1,426 km
crushed stone or gravel; 5,318 km improved earth and 3,037
km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: native craft only; of local importance
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 83 total, 59 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 16 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: the system is a minimal combina-
tion of open-wire lines, radio-relay links, and a few
radiocommunication stations; Gaborone is the center; 7,900
telephones (1.2 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, 1 FM, and no TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 173,000; 87,000 fit for
military service; 8,000 reach military age (18) annually
LAND
8,521,100 km2; 4% cultivated, 13% pasture, 23% built-on
area, waste, and other, 60% forested
Land boundaries: 13,076 km
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 7,491 km
PEOPLE
Population: 115,415,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.8% (current)
Nationality: noun-Brazilian(s); adjective-Brazilian
Ethnic divisions: 60% white, 30% mixed, 8% Negro, and
2% Indian (1960 est.)
Religion: 93% Roman Catholic (nominal)
Language: Portuguese
Literacy: 83% of the population 15 years or older (1978)
Labor force: about 30 million in 1970 (est.); 44.2%
agriculture, livestock, forestry, and fishing, 17.8% industry,
15.3% services, transportation, and communication, 8.9%
commerce, 4.8% social activities, 3.9% public administration,
5.1% other
Organized labor: about 50% of labor force; only about 1.5
million pay dues
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Federative Republic of Brazil
Type: federal republic; military-backed presidential re-
gime since April 1964
Capital: Brasilia
Political subdivisions: 21 states, 4 territories, federal
district (Brasilia)
Legal system: based on Latin codes; dual system of courts,
state and federal; constitution adopted 1967 and extensively
amended in 1969; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 7 September
Branches: strong executive with very broad powers;
bicameral legislature (powers of the two bodies have been
sharply reduced); 11-man Supreme Court
Government leader: President Ernesto Geisel
Suffrage: compulsory over age 18, except illiterates and
those stripped of their political rights; approximately 30
million registered voters in October 1970
Elections: President Geisel's successor will be chosen by a
505-member electoral college, composed of the members of
Congress and delegates selected from the state legislatures,
on 15 January 1979, taking office 15 March 1979
Voting strength: (November 1974 congressional elections)
33.6% ARENA, 31.9% MDB, 35.5% blank and void
Political parties and leaders: National Renewal Alliance
(ARENA), pro-government Francelino Pereira, president;
Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB), opposition, Ulisses
Guimaraes, president
Communists: 6,000, 1,000 militants
Other political or pressure groups: excepting the
military, the Catholic Church is the only active nationwide
pressure group, however, divisions within the Church often
prevent it from speaking with one voice; labor and student
groups have more vocal in recent months
Member of: FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU,
ISO, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council, LAFTA,
OAS, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $163 billion (est. 1977 in 1977 prices), $1,430 per
capita; 25% gross investment, 80% consumption, -5% net
foreign balance (1976); real growth rate 4.78% (1977)
Agriculture: main products-coffee, rice, beef, corn,
milk, sugarcane, soybeans; nearly self-sufficient; caloric
intake, 2,900 calories per day per capita (1962)
Fishing: catch 674,500 metric tons (1975); exports, $46.6
million (f.o.b. 1974), imports, $57.8 million (f.o.b. 1974)
Major industries: textiles and other consumer goods,
chemicals, cement, lumber, steel, motor vehicles, other
metalworking industries
Crude steel: 12.0 million metric tons capacity (1977 est.);
11.2 million metric tons produced (1977); 80 kg per capita
Electric power: 24,500,000 kW capacity (1977); 85 billion
kWh produced (1977), 750 kWh per capita
Exports: $12,139 million (f.o.b., 1977); coffee, manufac-
tures, iron ore, cotton, soybeans, sugar, wood, cocoa, beef,
shoes
Imports: $11,999 million (c.i.f., 1977); machinery, chemi-
cals, pharmaceuticals, petroleum, wheat, copper, aluminum
Major trade partners: exports-16% U.S., 6% Japan, 9%
West Germany, 7% Netherlands, 4% Italy, 4% U.K.;
imports-25% U.S., 9% West Germany, 8% Japan, 3% Italy,
3% U.K. (1976)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), loans
$1.7 billion, grants $690 million; from international organi-
zations (FY46-75), $4.1 billion; from other Western countries
(1960-71), $617.0 million; from Communist countries
(1959-76), $499 million; drawings (1959-76), $160 million
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Budget: (1977) revenues $17.2 billion, expenditures $17.1
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 16.50 cruzeiros=US$1 (Feb-
ruary 1978, changes frequently)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 30,300 km total; 26,543 km meter gage (1.000
m), 3,361 km 1.60-meter gage, 194 km standard gage (1.435
m), 202 km 0.76-meter gage; 2,249 km electrified
Highways: 1,489,000 km total; 71,200 km paved,
1,417,800 km gravel or earth
Inland waterways: 50,000 km navigable
Ports: 8 major, 23 significant minor
Pipelines: crude oil, 2,000 km; refined products, 465 km;
natural gas, 257 km
Civil air: 144 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased
Airfields: 4,306 total, 4,059 usable; 157 with permanent-
surface runways; 16 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 499 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 18 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: fair telecom system; good radio
relay facilities; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station with 2
antennas; 3 domestic satellite stations; 3.99 million tele-
phones (3.5 per 100 popl.); 1,100 AM stations, 150 FM, and
175 TV stations; 2 coaxial submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 25,499,000; 14,605,000
fit for military service; 1,281,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $2,153 million; 8.6% of central government budget
LAND
5,776 km2; 3% cultivated; 22% industry, waste, urban or
other; 75% forested
Land boundaries: 381 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 161 km
PEOPLE
Population: 177,000 official estimate for 1 July 1976
Nationality: noun-Bruneian(s); adjective-Bruneian
Ethnic divisions: 52% Malays, 28% Chinese, 15%
indigenous tribes, 5% other
Religion: 60% Muslim (Islam official religion); 8%
Christian; 32% other (Buddhist and animist)
Language: Malay and English official, Chinese
Literacy: 45%
Labor force: 32,155; 30.5% agriculture; 32.8% industry,
manufacturing, and construction; 33.8% trade, transport,
services; 2.9% other
Organized labor: 8.4% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Brunei
Type: British protectorate; constitutional sultanate
Capital: Bandar Seri Begawan
Political subdivisions: 4 administrative districts
Legal system: based on Islamic law; constitution promul-
gated by the Sultan in 1959
Branches: Chief of State is Sultan (advised by appointed
Privy Council) who appoints Executive Council and
Legislative Council
Government leader: Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah
Suffrage: universal age 21 and over; 3-tiered system of
indirect elections; popular vote cast for lowest level (district
councilors)
Elections: last elections-March 1965; further elections
postponed indefinitely
Political parties and leaders: antigovernment, exiled
Brunei People's Party, Chairman A. M. N. Azahari
Communists: information not available
ECONOMY
GNP: $460 million (1975 est.), $2,970 per capita
Agriculture: main crops-rubber, rice, pepper, must
import most food
Major industry: crude petroleum, liquefied natural gas
Electric power: 84,000 kW capacity (1977); 230 million
kWh produced (1977), 1,300 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,000 million (f.o.b., 1975); 95% crude petro-
leum and liquefied natural gas
Imports: $200 million (c.i.f., 1975); 25% machinery and
transport equipment, 46% manufactured goods, 16% food
Major trade partners: exports of crude petroleum and
liquefied natural gas to Japan; imports from Japan 30%, U.S.
24%, U.K. 15%, Singapore 9%
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Budget: (1976) revenues $640 million, expenditures $250
million, surplus $390 million; 20% defense
Monetary conversion rate: 2.5 Brunei dollars=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 9.6 km narrow gage (0.610 m)
Highways: 1,206 km total; 376 km paved (bituminous
treated), 402 km gravel or stone, 428 km unimproved
Inland waterways: 209 km; navigable by craft drawing
less than 1.2 meters
Ports: 2 minor (Bandar Seri Begawan, formerly Brunei,
and Kuala Belait)
Pipelines: crude oil, 135 km; refined products, 56 km;
natural gas, 56 km; crude oil and natural gas, 241 km under
construction
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 3 total, 3 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runway; 1 with runway over 3,660 m; 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: service throughout country is ade-
quate for present needs; international service good to
adjacent Sabah and Sarawak; radiobroadcast coverage good;
11,000 telephones (0.3 per 100 popl.); Radio Brunei
broadcasts from 6 AM stations and 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 38,000; 23,000 fit for
military service; about 1,800 reach military age (18)
annually
BULGARIA
LAND
111,852 km2; 41% arable, 11% other agricultural, 33%
forested, 15% other
Land boundaries: 1,883 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 354 km
PEOPLE
Population: 8,848,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Bulgarian(s); adjective-Bulgarian
Ethnic divisions: 85.3% Bulgarians, 8.5% Turks, 2.6%
Gypsies, 2.5% Macedonians, 0.3% Armenians, 0.2% Russians,
0.6% other
Religion: regime promotes atheism; religious background
of population is 85% Bulgarian Orthodox, 13% Muslim, 0.8%
Jewish, 0.7% Roman Catholic, 0.5% Protestant, Gregorian-
Armenian and other
Language: Bulgarian; secondary languages closely corre-
spond to ethnic breakdown
Literacy: 95% (est.)
Labor force: 5.0 million (1974); 32% agriculture, 33%
industry, 35% other
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of Bulgaria
Type: Communist state
Capital: Sofia
Political subdivisions: 28 okrugs (districts), including
capital city of Sofia
Legal system: based on civil law system, with Soviet law
influence; new constitution adopted in 1971; judicial review
of legislative acts in the State Council; legal education at
University of Sofia; has accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: National Liberation Day, 9 September
Branches: legislative, National Assembly; judiciary, Coun-
cil of Ministers
Government leaders: Todor Zhivkov, Chairman, State
Council (President and chief of state); Stanko Todorov,
Chairman, Council of Ministers (premier)
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: theoretically held every 5 years for National
Assembly; last elections held on 20 May 1976; 99.85% of the
electorate voted
Political parties and leaders: Bulgarian Communist
Party, Todor Zhivkov, First Secretary; Bulgarian National
Agrarian Union, a puppet party, Petur Tanchev, secretary of
Permanent Board
Communists: 817,000 party members (January 1978)
Mass organizations and front groups: Fatherland Front,
Dimitrov Communist Youth League, Central Council of
Trade Unions, National Committee for Defense of Peace,
Union of Fighters Against Fascism and Capitalism, Commit-
tee of Bulgarian Women, All-National Committee for
Bulgarian-Soviet Friendship
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BULGARIA/BURMA
Member of: CEMA, FAO, IAEA, ICAO, ILO, Interna-
tional Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IPU, ITC, ITU,
IWC-International Wheat Council, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO, Warsaw Pact, International Organiza-
tion of Journalists, International Medical Association, Inter-
national Radio and Television Organization
ECONOMY
GNP: $20.9 billion, 1977 (at 1976 dollars), $2,373 per
capita; 1977 real growth rate, 0.4%
Agriculture: mainly self-sufficient; main crops-grain,
vegetables; caloric intake, 3,000 calories per day per capita
(1969/70)
Fishing: catch 160,000 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: agricultural processing, machinery,
textiles and clothing, mining, ore processing, timber
Shortages: some raw materials, metal products, meat and
dairy products; fodder
Crude steel: 2.6 million metric tons produced (1977), 292
kg per capita
Electric power: 7,300,000 kW capacity (1977); 29.7
billion kWh produced (1977), 3,355 kWh per capita
Exports: $6,330 million (f.o.b., 1977); 46% machinery,
equipment, and transportation equipment; 15% fuels,
minerals, raw materials, metals, and other industrial
material; 2% agricultural raw materials; 29% foodstuffs, raw
materials for food industry, and animals; 10% industrial
consumer goods (1977)
Imports: $6,346 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); 39% machinery,
equipment, and transportation equipment; 45% fuels,
minerals, raw materials, metals, other materials; 7% agricul-
tural raw materials; 4% foodstuffs and animals; 5% industrial
consumer goods (1977)
Major trade partners: $12,676 million in 1977; 20% with
non-Communist countries, 56% with U.S.S.R., 24% with
other Communist countries
Monetary conversion rate: 0.948 leva=US$1 (1977)
Fiscal year: calendar year; economic data reported for
calendar years except for caloric intake, which is reported
for consumption year 1 July-30 June
NOTE: Foreign trade figures were converted at the 1977
rate of 0.948 leva=US$1
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,314 km total; about 4,069 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 245 km narrow gage; 299 km double track; 1,446
km electrified; government-owned (1976)
Highways: 31,454 km total; 6,683 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block; 6,088 km asphalt treated, gravel, crushed stone;
18,683 km earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 471 km (1978)
Freight carried: rail-75.2 million metric tons, 17.1
billion metric ton/km (1977); highway-319 million metric
tons, 6.7 billion metric ton/km (1977); waterway-4.4
million metric tons, 2.4 billion metric ton/km (excl. int'l.
transit traffic) in approximately 214 waterway craft with
227,000 metric ton capacity (1976)
Ports: 3 major (Varna, Varna West, Burgas), 4 minor
(1977)
LAND
678,600 km2; 28% arable, of which 12% is cultivated, 62%
forest, 10% urban and other (1969)
Land boundaries: 5,850 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm (200 nm
exclusive economic zone)
Coastline: 3,060 km
PEOPLE
Population: 32,205,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.2% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Burman(s); adjective-Burmese
Ethnic divisions: 72% Burman, 7% Karen, 6% Shan, 2%
Kachin, 2% Chin, 2% Chinese, 3% Indian, 6% other
Religion: 85% Buddhist, 15% animist and other
Language: Burmese; minority ethnic groups have their
own languages
Literacy: 70% (official claim)
Labor force: 12.2 million (1976); 67% agriculture, 13%
industry, 20% services, commerce, and transportation
Organized labor: no figure available; old labor organiza-
tions have been disbanded, and government is forming one
central labor organization
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma
Type: republic under 1974 constitution
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Capital: Rangoon
Political subdivisions: seven divisions and seven constitu-
ent states; subdivided into townships, villages, and wards
Legal system: People's Justice system and People's Courts
instituted under 1974 constitution; legal education at
Universities of Rangoon and Mandalay; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 4 January
Branches: State Council rules through a Council of
Ministers; People's Assembly has legislative power
Government leader: Chairman of State Council and
President, Gen. U. Ne Win
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: People's Assembly and local People's Councils
elected in 1978
Political parties and leaders: government-sponsored
Burma Socialist Program Party only legal party
Communists: estimated 5,000-8,000
Other political or pressure groups: People's Patriotic
Party; Kachin Independence Army; Karen Nationalist
Union, several Shan factions
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, FAO, G-77, GATT,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
ITU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $3.7 billion (FY77, in current prices), $117 per
capita; real growth rate 6% (FY77); 3.9% over past decade
Agriculture: accounts for nearly 70% of total employment
and about 27% of GDP; main crops-paddy, sugarcane,
corn, peanuts; almost 100% self-sufficient; most rice grown
in deltaic land
Fishing: catch 500,000 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: agricultural processing; textiles and
footwear; wood and wood products; petroleum refining
Electric power: 450,000 kW capacity (1977); 890 million
kWh produced (1977), 30 kWh per capita
Exports: $218 million (f.o.b., 1978); rice, teak
Imports: $174 million (c.i.f., 1978); machinery and
transportation equipment, textiles, other manufactured
goods
Major trade partners: exports-India, Western Europe,
China, U.K., Japan; imports-Japan, Western Europe, India,
U.K.
Budget: (FY78) $2.765 billion revenues; $2.975 billion
expenditures; $210 million deficit; 30% military, 70%
civilian
Monetary conversion rate: 7.3194 kyat=US$1 (official)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,285 km total; 3,172 km meter gage (1.00 m),
113 km narrow-gage industrial lines; 328 km double track;
government-owned
Highways: 27,000 km total; 3,200 km bituminous, 17,700
km improved earth, gravel, 6,100 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 12,800 km; 3,200 km navigable by
large commercial vessels
Ports: 4 major, 6 minor
Civil air: about 20 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 80 total, 78 usable; 23 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 39 with runways
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: provide minimum requirements
for local intercity service; international service is fair;
radiobroadcast coverage is limited to the most populous
areas; 31,400 telephones (0.1 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, 1 FM,
and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: (announced) for fiscal year ending 31
March 1978; $148.9 million, 5% of central government
budget
BURUNDI
LAND
28,490 km2; about 37% arable (about 66% cultivated), 23%
pasture, 10% scrub and forest, 30% other
Land boundaries: 974 km
PEOPLE
Population: 4,212,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Burundian(s); adjective-Burundian
Ethnic divisions: Africans-85% Hutu (Bantu), 14% Tutsi
(Hamitic), 1% Twa (Pigmy); other Africans include perhaps
50,000 Zairians and 40,000 Rwandans; non-Africans include
about 3,000 Europeans and 1,000 South Asians
Religion: about 60% Christian (53% Catholic, 7%
Protestant); rest mostly animist plus perhaps 2% Muslims
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BURUNDI/CAMBODIA
Language: Kirundi and French official plus Swahili
(along Lake Tanganyika and in the Bujumbura area)
Literacy: about 15% in Kirundi, 3% in French, no
serviceable estimate for Kiswahili
Labor force: about 2 million (1976 est.)
Organized labor: sole group is the Union of Burundi
Workers (UTB); by charter, membership is extended to all
Burundi workers (informally); figures denoting "active
membership" have been unobtainable
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Burundi
Type: republic; military government overthrown by
military coup, November 1976; constitution abolished
Capital: Bujumbura
Political subdivisions: 8 provinces, subdivided into 18
arrondissements and 78 communes; Bujumbura city (popula-
tion est. 160,000) has status equal to a province
Legal system: based on German and French civil codes
and customary law; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 July
Branches: Supreme Revolutionary Council is governing
body
Government leader: Col. Jean Bagaza, Chairman of
Supreme Revolutionary Council, established November 1976
Elections: last legislative election May 1965; legislature
dissolved in 1966
Political parties and leaders: National Paity of Unity and
Progress (UPRONA), a Tutsi led party, declared sole
legitimate party in 1966
Communists: no Communist party; resumed diplomatic
relations with the Peoples Republic of China in October
1971 following a six-year suspension; U.S.S.R., North Korea,
and Romania also have diplomatic missions in Burundi
Member of: AFDB, EAMA, ECA, FAO, G-77, GATT,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: about $450 million (1976), $120 per capita; 2% real
growth (1970-74); real GDP growth in 1976, 7%
Agriculture: major cash crops-coffee, cotton, tea; main
food crops-manioc, yams, corn, sorghums, bananas, haricot
beans; marginally self-sufficient
Industries: light consumer goods such as beverages,
blankets, shoes, soap, assembly of imports
Electric power: 7,500 kW capacity (diesel generator
1977); 25 million kWh produced (1977), 6 kWh per capita
Exports: $125 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); coffee (90%), tea,
cotton, hides, skins
Imports: $75 million (c.i.f., 1977 est.); textiles, foodstuffs,
transport equipment, petroleum products
Major trade partners: U.S., EEC countries
Aid: $40 million all donors (1975 est.), major donors EC,
IBRD/IDA, U.N.
Budget: FY77-revenue $47 million, current expenditure
$48 million
Monetary
(official)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 7,800 km total; 300 km bituminous, 2,500 km
crushed stone, gravel, or laterite, and 3,000 km improved
earth, and 2,000 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: Lake Tanganyika navigable for lake
steamers and barges, 1 minor lake port
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 12 total, 12 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m
Telecommunications: telegraph is principal service,
limited telephones; 6,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 2
AM, 1 FM, and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 907,000; 470,000 fit for
military service; 45,000 reach military age (16) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $11,200,000; about 17% of central government budget
LAND
181,300 km'; 16% cultivated, 74% forested, 10% built-on
area, wasteland, and other
Land boundaries: 2,438 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: about 443 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 8,148,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (7-68 to 7-69)
Nationality: noun-Cambodian(s) or Khmer (sing., pl.);
adjective-Cambodian or Khmer
Ethnic divisions: 90% Khmer
5% other minorities
Religion: 95% Theravada
Language: Cambodian
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic
Type: Communist state
Capital: Phnom Penh
Political subdivisions: 19 or 20 provinces
Legal system: Tribunal Committee chosen by People's
Representative Assembly
National holiday: 17 April
Branches: State Presidium, composed of chairman and
two vice chairmen; cabinet, totally Communist; 250-mem-
ber People's Representative Assembly elected 20 March
1976 for 5-year term; ten-member Assembly Standing
Committee
Government leader: Presidium Chairman, Khieu Sam-
phan; Prime Minister, Pol Pot; Deputy Prime Ministers, leng
Sary, Vorn Vet, Son Sen; Assembly Standing Committee
Chairman, Nuon Chea
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Political parties and leaders: political life dominated by
Khmer Communist Party
Member of: Colombo Plan G-77, Mekong Committee
(inactive), NAM, U.N.
ECONOMY
GNP: less than $500 million (1971), probably less than $70
per capita (1976)
Agriculture: mainly subsistence except for rubber planta-
tions; main crops-rice, rubber, corn; food shortages-rice,
meat, vegetables, dairy products, sugar, flour
Major industries: rice milling, fishing, wood and wood
products
Shortages: fossil fuels
Electric power: 120,000 kW capacity (1977); 260 million
kWh produced (1977), 30 kWh per capita
Exports: probably less than $1 million est. (1977); rubber,
rice
Imports: probably less than $20 million (1976); food, fuel,
machinery
Major trade partners: exports-China, Thailand; im-
ports-China, North Korea
Aid: commitments (1970-76): U.S. economic, $652 mil-
lion; military, $1,260 million; Western (except U.S.), $10.8
million; Eastern Europe, $17 million; U.S.S.R., $25 million;
China, $90 million; military-U.S., $1,334 million (FY46-76)
Budget: no budget data available since Communists took
over government
Monetary conversion rate:
Khmer Rouge government
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 612 km
ment-owned
Highways: 13,351 km total; 2,622 km bituminous, 7,105
km crushed stone, gravel, or improved earth; and 3,624 km
unimproved earth; some roads in disrepair
Inland waterways: 3,700 km navigable all year to craft
drawing 0.6 meters; 282 km navigable to craft drawing 1.8
meters
Ports: 2 major, 5 minor
Airfields: 60 total, 25 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 6 with
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,831,000; 1,017,000 fit
for military service; 82,000 reach military age (18) annually
LAND
475,400 km2; 4% cultivated, 18% grazing, 13% fallow, 50%
forest, 15% other
Land boundaries: 4,554 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 18 nm
Coastline: 402 km
PEOPLE
Population: 8,008,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.0% (current)
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CAMEROON/CANADA
Nationality: noun-Cameroonian(s); adjective-Came-
roonian
Ethnic divisions: about 200 tribes of widely differing
background; 31% Cameroon Highlanders, 19% Equatorial
Bantu, 8% Northwestern Bantu, 10% Fulani, 7% Eastern
Nigritic, 11% Kirdi, 13% other African, less than 1%
non-African
Religion: about one-half animist, one-third Christian; rest
Muslim
Language: English and French official, 24 major African
language groups
Literacy: South 40%, North 10%
Labor force: most of population engaged in subsistence
agriculture and herding; 200,000 wage earners (maximum)
including 22,000 government employees, 63,000 paid
agricultural workers, 49,000 in manufacturing
Organized labor: under 45% of wage labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United Republic of
Type: unitary republic; one-party
Capital: Yaounde
Political subdivisions:
t
Cameroon
presidential regime
7 provinces divided into 39
Fishing: imports 7,024 metric tons, $2.2 million; exports
909 metric tons (largely shrimp), $3.5 million (1975)
Major industries: small aluminum plant, food processing
and light consumer goods industries, sawmills 347
Electric power: 358,000 kW capacity (1977); 1,347
million kWh produced (1977), 200 kWh per capita
Exports: $615 million (f.o.b., FY77); cocoa and coffee
about 60%; other exports include timber, aluminum, cotton,
natural rubber, bananas, peanuts, tobacco, and tea
Imports: $658 million (c.i.f., FY77); consumer goods,
machinery, transport equipment, alumina for refining,
petroleum products, food and beverages
Major trade partners: about 70% of total trade with
France and other EC countries; about 5% of total trade with
U.S.
Budget: FY78 budget est. balanced at $560 million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,003 km total; 858 km meter gage (1.00 m),
145 km 0.600-meter gage
Highways: approximately 29,866 km total; including
2,155 km bituminous, 27,711 km gravel and earth
Inland waterways: 2,090 km
Ports: 1 major (Douala), 3 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 63 total, 60 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 21 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: fair telephone service; fair to good
telegraph service; 26,000 telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); 4
AM, no FM, and no TV stations; 1 submarine cable; 1
Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,538,000; 766,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually about 66,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$53,996,400; 9.7% of central government budget
s
departmen
Legal system: based on French civil law system, with
common law influence; new unitary constitution adopted
1972; judicial review in Supreme Court, when a question of
constitutionality is referred to it by the President of the
Republic; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 20 May
Branches: executive, legislative, and judicial
Government leader: President Ahmadou Ahidjo
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: presidential elections held 5 April 1975;
parliamentary elections last held 18 May 1973
Political parties and leaders: single
Ahmadou Ahidjo
National Union (UNC),
Communists: no Communist Party or significant number
of sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: Cameroon Peoples
Union (UPC), an illegal terrorist group now reduced to
scattered acts of banditry with its factional leaders in exile
Member of: AFBD, EAMA, ECA, EIB (associate), FAO,
G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITU, Lake Chad Basin Commission,
NAM, Niger River Commission, OAU, UDEAC, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $2,500 million (mid 1977), per capita about $310;
real growth rate about 4.9% per annum (mid 1970-mid
1977)
Agriculture: commercial and food crops-cocoa, coffee,
timber, cotton, rubber, bananas, peanuts, palm oil and palm
kernels; root starches, livestock, millet, sorghum, and rice
CANADA
LAND
9,971,500 km'; 4% cultivated, 2% meadows and pastures,
44% forested, 42% waste or urban, 8% inland water
Land boundaries: 9,010 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 90,908 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 23,632,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 1.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Canadian(s); adjective-Canadian
Ethnic divisions: 44% British Isles origin, 30% French
origin, 26% other
Religion: 48% Protestant, 47% Catholic, 5% other
Language: English and French official
Labor force: 10.3 million; 29% service, 22% manufactur-
ing, 16% trade, 8% transportation and utilities, 6% agricul-
ture, 6% construction, 8% other; 8.6% unemployed (March
1978)
Organized labor: 30% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Canada
Type: federal state recognizing Elizabeth II as sovereign
Capital: Ottawa
Political subdivisions: 10 provinces and 2 territories
Legal system: based on English common law, except in
Quebec, where civil law system based on French law
prevails; constitution is British North America Act of 1867
and various amendments; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdic-
tion, with reservations
National holiday: Dominion Day, 1 July
Branches: federal executive power vested in cabinet
collectively responsible to House of Commons, and headed
by Prime Minister; federal legislative authority resides in
Parliament consisting of Queen represented by Governor-
General, Senate, and Commons; judges appointed by
Governor-General on the advice of the government;
Supreme Court is highest tribunal
Government leader: Pierre Elliott Trudeau
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: legal limit of 5 years but in practice held at
least every 4 years, last election July 1974
Political parties and leaders: Liberal, Pierre Trudeau;
Progressive-Conservatives, Joe Clark; New Democratic,
Edward Broadbent; Social Credit, vacant since death of
Andre Fortin in July 1977
Voting strength (1974 election (numbers in parens
indicate current party strengths in Parliament)): Liberal
43% (140 seats), Progressive Conservative 35% (90 seats),
New Democratic Party 16% (16 seats), Social Credit 5% (9
seats), other 1%, Independents hold 2 seats, 7 seats
unoccupied; Parliament enlarged from 264 seats to 282 seats
on 12 June but new seats will not be filled until next general
election expected in 1978
Communists: 2,000 approx.
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, Commomwealth, DAC,
FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICES, ICRC, IDA, IDB,
IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study
Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-Interna-
tional Whaling Commission, IWC-International Wheat
Council, NATO, OAS (observer), OECD, U.N., UNC-
TAD, UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $195.3 billion (1977, in 1977 prices), $8,394 per
capita (1977); 58.7% consumption, 22.5% investment, 19.2%
government (1977); growth rate 4.0% (1970-77, constant
prices)
Agriculture: main products-livestock, grains (principally
wheat), dairy products; food shortages-fresh fruits and
vegetables; caloric intake, 3,180 calories per day per capita
(1966-67)
Fishing: catch 1.065 million metric tons; exports 296,773
metric tons (1976)
Major industries: mining, metals, food products, wood
and paper products, transportation equipment, chemicals
Shortages: rubber, rolled steel, fruits, precision
instruments
Crude steel: 13.1 million metric tons produced (1976)
Electric power: 73 million kW capacity (1977); 244
million kWh produced (1977), 12,794 kWh per capita
Exports: $45,965 million (f.o.b., 1977, source: I.F.S.);
principal items-transportation equipment, wood and wood
products including paper, ferrous and nonferrous ores, crude
petroleum, wheat; Canada is a major food exporter
Imports: $44,630 million (c.i.f., 1977, source: I.F.S.);
principal items-transportation equipment, machinery,
crude petroleum, communication equipment, textiles, steel,
fabricated metals, office machines, fruits and vegetables
Major trade partners: 68% U.S., 10% EC, 5% Japan
(1976)
Aid: economic--(received) U.S., $388 million (FY46-75);
gross official aid to less developed countries and multilateral
agencies, $3,688 million (1960-73), $637 million (1973);
military-U.S., $13 million (FY49-76), none since 1961
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Budget: total revenues $33,781 million; current expendi-
tures $39,930 million; gross capital formation $6,833 million;
budget deficit $6,149 million (1977) (National Accounts
Basis)
Monetary conversion rate: there is no designated par
value for the Canadian dollar, which was allowed to float
freely on the exchanges beginning 1 June 1970; since then
the Canadian dollar has moved between US$0.86-1.04 in
value, 1977 average 1C$=US$0.9400
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 71,503 km total; 70,141 km standard gage
(1.435 m) (43 km electrified); 1,183 km 1.067-meter gage (in
Newfoundland); 179 km 0.914-meter gage
Highways: 829,325 km total; 640,850 km surfaced
(189,800 km paved), 188,475 km earth
Inland waterways: 3,000 km
Pipelines: oil, 23,564 km total crude and refined; natural
gas, 74,980 km
Ports: 19 major, 300 minor
Civil air: 589 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1,801 total, 1,452 usable; 295 with permanent-
surface runways; 4 with runways over 3,659 m, 29 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 285 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 58
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: excellent service provided by mod-
ern telecom media; 13.8 million telephones (60.4 per 100
popl.); countrywide AM, FM, and TV coverage including
630 AM, 80 FM, and 500 TV stations; 8 coaxial submarine
cables; 3 major COMSAT stations and 70 domestic COMSAT
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 5,814,000; 4,998,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(17) annually 233,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
March 1978, $3.98 billion; about 8.4% of proposed central
government budget
CAPE VERDE
LAND
4,040 km2. divided among 10 islands and several islets
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 100 nm
Coastline: 965 km
PEOPLE
Population: 315,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.9% (12-70 to 7-76)
Nationality: adjective-Cape Verdian
CAPE VERDE
v~ p
Ethnic divisions: about 28% African; 70% mulatto; 2%
European
Religion: Catholicism, fused with local superstitions
Language: Portuguese and crioula, a blend of Portuguese
and West African words
Literacy: 14%
Labor force: bulk of population engaged in subsistence
agriculture
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Cape Verde
National holiday: 12 September
Type: republic; achieved independence from Portugal in
July 1975
Capital: Praia
Political subdivisions: 10 islands
Legal system: to be determined
National holiday: 12 September
Branches: National Assembly, 56 members; the official
party is the supreme political institution
Government leaders: President, Aristides Pereira; Prime
Minister, Pedro Pires; Minister of Foreign Affairs, Abilio
Duarte
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: to be determined
Political parties and leaders: Partido Africano da
Independencia da Guinee e Cabo Verde (PAIGC), led by
Aristide Pereira, only legal party
Communists: none known
Member of: G-77, NAM, OAU, U.N.
ECONOMY
GDP: $50 million (1975 est.); $170 per capita income
Agriculture: main crops-corn, beans, manioc, sweet
potatoes; barely self-sufficient in food
Fishing: catch, 4,400 metric tons (1975); largely undevel-
oped but provides major source of export earnings
Major industries: salt mining
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Electric power: 6,000 kW capacity (1977); 7 million kWh
produced (1977); 20 kWh per capita
Exports: $2.5 million (f.o.b., 1975); fish, bananas, salt
Imports: $31 million (c.i.f., 1975); machinery, textiles
Major trade partners: Portugal, U.K., Japan, African
neighbors
Aid: Portugal, $30 million (1975), for civil service salaries,
food, medicines; U.S., $7.2 million (1946-76), for food and
employment of rural workers; Netherlands, Scandinavian
countries, UNDP
Budget: (est. 1976) $30 million expenditures, $15 million
revenues
Monetary conversion rate: 40.643 escudos=US$1
(November 1977)
Fiscal year: probably calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Ports: 1 major (Mindelo), 3 minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 6 total, 6 usable; 4 permanent-surface runways;
1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 4 with runways 1,220-2,439
m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: interisland radio-relay system, HF
radio to mainland Portugal, about 1,600 telephones (0.3 per
100 popl.); 1 FM and 5 AM stations; 2 coaxial submarine
cables
CENTRAL AFRICAN EMPIRE
LAND
626,780 km2; 10%-15% cultivated, 5% dense forests,
80%-85% grazing, fallow, vacant arable land, urban, waste
Land boundaries: 4,981 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,912,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Central African(s); adjective-Cen-
tral African
Ethnic divisions: approximately 80 ethnic groups, the
majority of which have related ethnic and linguistic
characteristics; Banda (32%) and Baya-Mandjia (29%) are
largest single groups; 6,500 Europeans, of whom 6,000 are
French and majority of the rest Portuguese
Religion: 40% Protestant, 28% Catholic, 27% animist, 5%
Muslim; animistic beliefs and practices strongly influence
the Christian majority
Language: French official; Sangho, lingua franca and
national language
Literacy: estimated at 5%-10%
Labor force: about half the population economically
active, 80% of whom are in agriculture; approximately
64,000 salaried workers
Organized labor: 1% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Central African Empire
Type: constitutional monarchy, founded on a single party
Capital: Bangui
Political subdivisions: 14 prefectures, 47 subprefectures
Legal system: based on French, Islamic, and tribal law; in
1966 the Chief of State assumed all power and abrogated the
constitution; in 1976 he promulgated a new constitution; has
not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 1 December
Branches: Emperor Bokassa is chief of state and rules by
decree; government is headed by a Prime Minister assisted
by the Council of Ministers; judiciary, Supreme Court, court
of appeals, criminal court, and numerous lower courts;
constitution calls for a National Assembly
Government leader: Emperor Salah Ad-Din Ahmad
Bokassa I
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: none have been held yet under Bokassa regime;
provided for in new constitution
Political parties and leaders: Movement for the Social
Evolution of Black Africa (MESAN), ruling party under
former regime, continues as a key body for organizing
support for the regime led by Emperor Bokassa
Communists: no Communist Party or significant number
of sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, Conference of East and Central
African States, EAMA, ECA, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM, UDEAC,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $394 million (1976), $220 per capita
Agriculture: commercial-cotton, coffee, peanuts, ses-
ame, wood; main food crops-manioc, corn, peanuts, rice,
potatoes, beef; requires wheat, flour, rice, beef, and sugar
imports
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CENTRAL AFRICAN EMPIRE/CHAD
Major industries: sawmills, cotton textile mills, brewery,
diamond mining and splitting
Electric power: 44,000 kW capacity (1977); 106 million
kWh produced (1977), 56 kWh per capita
Exports: $100 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); cotton, coffee,
diamonds, timber
Imports: $100 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); textiles, petrole-
um products, machinery and electrical equipment, motor
vehicles and equipment, chemicals and pharmaceuticals
Aid: economic (1946-76) -U.S., $9.6 million; EC, $73.8
million; U.N., $11.5 million; other international organiza-
tions, $23.4 million; Communist countries (1964-75), $7.2
million
Major trade partners: France; preferential tariff applied
to EC countries and franc zone; Yugoslavia, Japan, U.S.
Budget: est. 1977 budget receipts and grants $68 million,
expenditures $81 million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 22,250 km total; 290 km bituminous, 4,120 km
gravel and/or crushed stone, 7,800 km improved earth,
remainder unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 7,080 km; traditional trade carried on
by means of dugouts on the extensive system of rivers and
streams; the Oubangui River between Bangui and Brazza-
ville is navigable for about 8 months a year, and short
sections of the Sangha and the Lobaye Rivers are navigable
throughout year; during high-water period (July-December)
Oubangui navigable upstream from Bangui as far as Ouango
Ports: Bangui, Ouango (river ports)
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 54 total, 46 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 18 with runways
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: facilities are meager; network is
composed of low-capacity, low-powered radiocommunica-
tion stations and radio-relay links; 5,540 telephones (0.3 per
100 popl.); 1 AM station, 1 FM station, and 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 464,000; 237,000 fit for
military service
Supply: mainly dependent on France, but has received
equipment from Israel, Italy, U.S.S.R., and FRG
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $7.5 million (current budget only); about 10.6% of
central government current budget
LAND
1,284,640 km2; 17% arable, 35% pastureland, 2% forest
and scrub, 46% other uses and waste
Land boundaries: 5,987 km
PEOPLE
Population: 4,289,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.1% (7-72 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Chadian(s); adjective-Chadian
Ethnic divisions: over 240 tribes representing 12 major
ethnic groups-Muslims (Arabs, Toubou, Fulani, Kotoko,
Hausa, Kanembou, Baguirmi, Boulala, and Wadai) in the
north and center and non-Muslims (Sara, Mayo-Kebbi, and
Chari) in the south; some 150,000 nonindigenous, 5,000 of
them French
Religion: about half Muslim, 5% Christian, remainder
animist
Language: French official; Chadian Arabic is lingua
franca in north, Sara and Sangho in south
Literacy: estimated 5%-10%
Labor force: only 55% of population in economically
active group, of which 90% are engaged in unpaid
subsistence farming, herding, and fishing; 47,000 wage
earners in industry and civil service
Organized labor: about 20% of wage labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Chad
Type: republic; military regime in power since April 1975
Capital: N'Djamena
Political subdivisions: 14 prefectures
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
Chadian customary law; constitution adopted 1962; constitu-
tion suspended and national assembly dissolved April 1975;
judicial review of legislative acts in theory a power of the
Supreme Court; has not accepted compulsory ICJ juris-
diction
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National holiday: 13 April
Branches: executive authority exercised by Supreme
Military Council composed of 9 officers
Government leader: President of Supreme Military
Council, General Felix Malloum
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: all political activity banned
Political parties and leaders: political parties banned
Communists: no front organizations or underground
party; probably a few Communists and some sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: armed Muslim rebel
bands have been opposing the government since October
1965 in east-central and since August 1969 in northern
Chad; rebels currently control the northern half of the
country
Member of. AFDB, Conference of East and Central
African States, EAMA, ECA, FAO, G-77, GATT, ICAC,
ICAO, IBRD, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, Lake Chad Basin
Commission, NAM, OAU, UEAC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $292 million (est. 1976), $75 per capita; estimated
real annual growth rate nearly zero since 1971
Agriculture: commercial-cotton, gum arabic, livestock,
fish; food crops-peanuts, millet, sorghum, rice, dates,
manioc, wheat; imports food
Fishing: catch 115,000 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: agricultural and livestock processing
plants (cotton textile mill, slaughterhouses, brewery), natron
Electric power: 22,000 kW capacity (1977); 60 million
kWh produced (1977), 15 kWh per capita
Exports: $45 million (f.o.b., 1976); cotton 67%
Imports: $124 million (c.i.f., 1976); cement, petroleum,
foodstuffs, machinery, textiles, and motor vehicles
Major trade partners: France (about 40% in 1973) and
UDEAC countries; preferential tariffs to EC and franc zone
countries
Aid: major source France, more than $10 million
(1971-73); EDF, more than $15 million (1971-73); U.S.
(FY46-76), $29.4 million; U.S.S.R., $5.0 million (1968-76);
China, $67.6 million (1971-76); military aid (1955-76)-$7.0
million; from France, $4.1 million, remainder from West
Germany and Israel; more than $10 million annually (est.) in
French military aid (1969-71)
Budget: 1977 ordinary budget-$70 million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 27,505 km total; 242 km bituminous, 4,385 km
gravel and laterite, and remainder unimproved
Inland waterways: approximately 2,090 km of year-
round navigability, increased to 4,830 km during high-water
period
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 67 total, 63 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 25 with runways
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: fair system of radiocommunication
stations only for intercity links; principal center N'Djamena,
secondary center Sarh; 5,480 telephones (0.1 per 100 pop].);
1 AM, no FM, and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,004,000; 524,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually about 40,000
Supply: dependent on France primarily
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $22.2 million; about 33% of total budget
LAND
740,740 km2; 2% cultivated, 7% other arable, 15%
permanent pasture, grazing, 29% forest, 47% barren
mountains, deserts, and cities
Land boundaries: 6,325 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 6,435 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 10,689,000 (July 1978),
growth rate 1.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Chilean(s); adjective-Chilean
Ethnic divisions: 95% European stock and mixed
European with some Indian admixture, 3% Indian, 2% other
Religion: 89% Roman Catholic, 11% Protestant
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 90% (1976)
Labor force: 3.7 million economically active (1977); 30%
agricultural, 29% industry and construction, 7% services,
10% commerce, 7% mining, 9% transportation, 8% other
(1977)
Organized labor:
Communists: 248,000 when PCCh was legal in 1973;
active militants now estimated at about 20,000
Other political or pressure groups: organized labor;
business organizations; landowners' associations (SNA-
Sociedad Nacional de Agricultural); Catholic church; ex-
treme leftist, Movement of Revolutionary Left (MIR),
outlawed; rightist, Patria y Libertad (PyL), outlawed
Member of: CIPEC, ECOSOC, FAO, G-77, GATT,
IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, LAFTA, OAS, SELA, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GDP: $9.4 billion (1977 in 1976 prices), $886 per capita;
79.1% private consumption, 11.9% government consump-
tion; 12.1% gross investment, -6.3.1% net imports and
factor payments abroad (1976 est.); real growth rate, 1977,
8.6%; 1972-77 average annual increase, negligible
Agriculture: main crops-wheat, other cereals, potatoes,
fruits; about 85% self-sufficient; 2,650 calories per day per
capita (1971 est.)
Fishing: catch 1.5 million metric tons (1977); exports $94
million (1977)
Major industries: copper, nitrates, foodstuffs, fish proc-
essing, textiles and apparel, iron and steel, pulp and paper
Crude steel: 0.7 million metric tons capacity (1967);
450,000 metric tons produced (1976), 42 kg per capita
Electric power: 2,775,000 kW capacity (1977); 9.73
billion kWh produced (1977), 910 kWh per capita
Exports: $2.2 billion (f.o.b., 1977); copper, iron ore, paper
products, nitrates, iodine, and fresh fruit
Imports: $2.3 billion (c.i.f., 1977); foodstuffs, petroleum,
machinery and equipment, chemicals
Major trade partners: exports-17% EC, 14% Japan, 13%
U.S., 39% LAFTA; imports-15% EC, 21% U.S., 33%
LAFTA, 12% Japan (1977)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $1,506
million loans, $313 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $720 million (of which IBRD $266
million, IDB $409 million); from other Western countries
(1960-66), $170.6 million; from Communist countries
(1967-76), $447.7 million; military (FY53-75)-from U.S.,
$62 million in loans, $154 million in grants
Budget: $2.5 billion revenues, $2.8 billion expenditures
(1977)
Monetary conversion rate: 29.12 pesos=US$1 (February
1978), changes frequently
Fiscal year: calendar year
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Chile
Type: republic
Capital: Santiago
Political subdivisions: 12 regions plus one metropolitan
district, 41 provincial subdivisions.
Legal system: based on Code 1857 derived from Spanish
law and subsequent codes influenced by French and
Austrian law; constitution adopted 1925, amended since
then, currently being revised; judicial review of legislative
acts in the Supreme Court; legal education at University of
Chile, Catholic University, and several others; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 18 September
Branches: four-man Military-Police junta, which exer-
cises constituent and legislative powers and has delegated
executive powers to President of Junta; the President has
announced a plan for transition from military to civilian rule
by 1985; Congress dissolved; civilian judiciary remains
Government leader: President, Gen. Augusto PINO-
CHET Ugarte; other junta members, Adm. Jose Toribio
MERINO Castro, Gen. Gustavo LEIGH Guzman, Gen.
Cesar MENDOZA Duran
Suffrage: none
Elections: prohibited by decree; all electoral registers
were destroyed in 1974
Political parties and leaders: Christian Democratic Party
(PDC), Andres Zaldivar and Eduardo Frei; National Party
(PN), Sergio Onofre Jarpa; PDC and (PN) are officially
banned; Popular Unity coalition parties (outlawed)-
Communist Party (PCCh), Luis Corvalan (in exile); Socialist
Party (PS), Clodomiro Almeyda and Carlos Altamirano
(both in exile); Radical Party (PR); Christian Left (IC);
United Popular Action Movement (MAPU); Independent
Popular Action (API)
Voting strength (1970 presidential election): 36.6%
Popular Unity coalition, 35.3% conservative independent,
28.1% Christian Democrat; (1973 Congressional election)
44% Popular Unity coalition, 56% Democratic Confeder-
ation (PDC and PN)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 6,361 km total; 3,111 km 1.676-meter gage,
135 km standard gage (1.435 m), 3,115 km meter gage
(1.00 M)
Highways: 75,200 km total; 9,000 km paved, 38,200 km
gravel, 28,000 km improved and unimproved earth
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Inland waterways: 725 km
Pipelines: crude oil, 755 km; refined products, 785 km;
natural gas, 320 km
Ports: 10 major, 20 minor
Civil air: 33 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 352 total, 349 usable; 45 with permanent-
surface runways; 8 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 53 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 6 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: modern telephone system based on
extensive radio relay facilities; 473,000 telephones (4.5 per
100 popl.); 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station; 180 AM, 30
FM, and 56 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,773,000; 2,089,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(19) annually about 116,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, US$732.6 million; about 26% of central government
budget
CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
LAND
9.6 million km2; 11% cultivated, sown area extended by
multicropping, 78% desert, waste, or urban (32% of this area
consists largely of denuded wasteland, plains, rolling hills,
and basins from which about 3% could be reclaimed), 8%
forested; 2%-3% inland water
Land boundaries: 24,000 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 14,500 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,003,855,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.0% (current)
Natiohality: noun-Chinese (sing., pl.); adjective-
Chinese
Ethnic divisions: 94% Han Chinese; 6% Chuang, Uighur,
Hui, Yi, Tibetan, Miao, Manchu, Mongol, Pu-I, Korean, and
numerous lesser nationalities
Religion: most people, even before 1949, have been
pragmatic and eclectic, not seriously religious; most impor-
tant elements of religion are Confucianism, Taoism,
Buddhism, ancestor worship; about 2%-3% Muslim, 1%
Christian
Language: Chinese (Mandarin mainly; also Cantonese,
Wu, Fukienese, Amoy, Hsiang, Kan, Hakka dialects), and
minority languages (see ethnic divisions above)
Literacy: at least 25%
Labor force: 335 million (mid-1966); 85% agriculture,
15% other; shortage of skilled labor (managerial, technical,
mechanics, etc.); surplus of unskilled labor
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of China
Type: Communist state; real authority lies with Commu-
nist party's political bureau; the National People's Congress,
in theory the highest organ of government, in reality merely
rubber stamps the party's programs; the State Council is the
actual governing organism
Capital: Peking
Political subdivisions: 21 provinces, 3 centrally governed
municipalities, and 5 autonomous regions
Legal system: before 1966, a complex amalgam of custom
and statute, largely criminal; little ostensible development of
uniform code of administrative and civil law; highest judicial
organ is Supreme People's Court although legal activity
centered in parallel network of Public Security organs; laws
and legal procedure clearly subordinated to priorities of
party policy; whole system largely suspended during
Cultural Revolution, but has been revived
National holiday: National Day, 1 October
Branches: prior to 1966 control was exercised by Chinese
Communist Party, through State Council, which supervised
more than 50 ministries, commissions, bureaus, etc., all
technically under the standing committee of the National
People's Congress; this system broke down under "Cultural
Revolution" pressures but has been reconsolidated and
streamlined to 37 ministries
Government leader: Premier of State Council, Hua
Kuo-feng; government subordinate to central committee of
CCP, under Chairman Hua Kuo-feng
Suffrage: universal over age 18, though this is academic
Elections: no meaningful elections
Political parties and leaders: Chinese Communist Party
(CCP), headed by Hua Kuo-feng; Hua is Chairman of
Central Committee; a new central committee was formed at
the 11th Party Congress held in August 1977
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CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF/CHINA, REPUBLIC OF
Voting strength: 100% Communist for practical purposes;
no political nonconformity permitted
Communists: about 35 million party members in 1977
Other political or pressure groups: army (PLA) remains a
major force, although many soldiers who acquired a wide
range of civil political-administrative duties during the
Cultural Revolution have been removed; many veteran
civilian officials, in eclipse since the Cultural Revolution,
have been reinstated; mass organizations, such as the trade
unions and the youth league, have been rebuilt in the
provinces; plans are underway to rebuild the national
organizations
Member of: FAO, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, Red Cross, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WMO, other international bodies
ECONOMY
GNP: $350 billion (1977), $362 per capita
Agriculture: main crops-rice, wheat, miscellaneous
grains, cotton; caloric intake, 2,000 calories per day per
capita (1977); agriculture mainly subsistence; grain imports
6.75 million metric tons in 1977
Major industries: iron and steel,
armaments, textiles, petroleum
Shortages: complex machinery
skilled scientists and technicians
coal, machine building,
and equipment, highly
Crude steel: 25 million metric tons produced, 26 kg per
capita (1977)
Electric power: 42 million kW capacity (1977); 150
billion kWh produced (1977), 155 kWh per capita
Exports: $7.9 billion (f.o.b., 1977); agricultural products,
oil, minerals and metals, manufactured goods
Imports: $6.9 billion (c.i.f., 1977); grain, chemical
fertilizer, steel, industrial raw materials, machinery and
equipment
Major trade partners: Japan, Hong Kong, West Germany,
France, Romania, U.S.S.R., Australia, U.S., Canada, Singa-
pore (1977)
Monetary conversion rate: as of 31 December 1977,
about 1.73 yuan=US$l (arbitrarily established)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: networks total about 45,000 route km com-
mon-carrier lines; about 600 km meter gage (1.00 m); rest
standard gage (1.435 m); all single track except 9,000 km
double track on standard gage lines; approximately 1,025 km
electrified; about 9,700 km industrial lines (gages range from
0.59 to 1.435 m)
Highways: about 835,000 km all types roads; almost half
(about 300,000 km) unimproved natural earth roads and
tracks; about 215,000 km improved earth roads about 2- to
5-meters wide and in poor to fair condition; remainder
(about 260,000 km) includes majority of principal roads
Airfields: 379 total; 9 with runways 3,500 m and over; 45
with runways 2,500 to 3,499 m; 187 with runways 1,200 to
2,499 m; 124 with runways less than 1,200 m; 2 seaplane
stations; 12 airfields under construction, of these, 249 have
permanent surface runways
Telecommunications: urban and industrial areas served
by reasonably adequate facilities for domestic and interna-
tional communication needs; facilities being expanded;
effective broadcast coverage is provided by radio, extensive
wired-broadcast networks, and an expanding TV network;
estimated 5 million telephones, 45 million radio receivers,
140 million wired-speakers and est. 500,000 TV receivers;
250 AM, 7 FM, and 120 TV transmitter and rebroadcast
stations; 3 standard international communications satellite
ground stations; coaxial cable links Canton to Hong Kong;
submarine cable links Shanghai to Japan; additional subma-
rine cables planned
CHINA, REPUBLIC OF
LAND
32,260 km2 (Taiwan and Pescadores); 24% cultivated, 6%
pasture, 55% forested, 15% other (urban, industrial, de-
nuded, water area)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 990 km Taiwan, 459 km offshore islands
PEOPLE
Population: 16,985,000, excluding the population of
Quemoy and Matsu Islands and foreigners (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 2.0% (1-74 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Chinese (sing., pl.); adjective-
Chinese
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Ethnic divisions: 84% Taiwanese, 14% mainland Chinese,
2% aborigines
Religion: 93% mixture of Buddhism, Confucianism, and
Taoism; 4.5% Christian; 2.5% other
Language: Chinese Mandarin (official
Taiwanese and Hakka dialect
Literacy: about 90%
Labor force: 6.12 million (1978); 26.2% primary industry
(agriculture), 39% secondary industry (including manufac-
turing, mining, construction), 34.8% tertiary industry (in-
cluding commerce and services) 1977; 2% unemployment
(1976)
Organized labor: about
(government controlled)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of China
Type: republic; one-party presidential regime
Capital: Taipei
Political subdivisions: 16 counties, 4 cities,
municipality (Taipei)
Legal system: based on civil law system; constitution
adopted 1947, amended 1960 to permit Chiang Kai-shek to
be reelected, and amended 1972 to permit President to
restructure certain government organs; accepts compulsory
1CJ jurisdiction, with reservations
Branches: 5 independent branches (executive, legislative,
judicial, plus traditional Chinese functions of examination
and control), dominated by executive branch; President and
Vice President elected by National Assembly
Government leaders: President Chiang Ching-kuo
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: national level-legislative yuan every 3 years
but no general election held since 1948 election on mainland
(partial elections for Taiwan province representatives
December 1969, December 1972, and December 1975);
local level-provincial assembly, county and municipal
executives every 4 years; county and municipal assemblies
every 4 years
Political parties and leaders: Kuomintang, or National
Party, led by Chairman Chiang Ching-kuo, has no real
opposition; 2 insignificant parties are Democratic Socialist
Party, Young China Party
Voting strength (1972 provincial assembly election): 58
seats Kuomintang, 13 seats independents
Other political or pressure groups: none
Member of: expelled from U.N. General Assembly and
Security Council on 25 October 1971 and withdrew on same
date from other charter-designated subsidiary organs;
attempting to retain membership in international financial
institutions; ICAC, ISO, IWC-International Wheat Council
ECONOMY
GNP: $19.5 billion (1977, in 1977 prices), $1,168 per
capita; real growth, 8.3% (1970-76 average)
Agriculture: most arable land intensely farmed-60%
cultivated land under irrigation; main crops-rice, sweet
potatoes, sugarcane, bananas, pineapples, citrus fruits; food
shortages-wheat, corn, soybeans
Fishing: catch 854,784 metric
tons (1977)
Major industries: textiles, clothing, chemicals, plywood,
electronics, sugar milling, food processing, cement, ship
building
Electric power: 7,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 29.7
billion kWh produced (1977), 1,765 kWh per capita
Exports: $9,361 million (f.o.b., 1977); 25% textiles, 15.9%
electrical machinery, 7.5% plywood and wood products, 7%
machinery and metal products, 7.5% plastics, 5% sugar
Imports: $8,511 million (c.i.f., 1977); 18% machinery, 9%
electrical machinery, 9% basic metals, 10% crude oil, 10%
chemical products
Major trade partners: exports-38.8% U.S., 11.9% Japan;
imports-31% Japan, 23% U.S. (1977)
Aid: economic-U.S. (FY46-76), $2.2 billion committed;
IBRD (1964-75), $311 million committed; Japan (1965-74),
$247 million committed; ADB (1968-75), $93 million
committed; military-U.S. (FY46-76), $4.3 billion com-
mitted
Central government budget: $3.5 billion (FY78)
Monetary conversion rate: NT$38 (New Taiwan)=US$l
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: about 1,000 km common-carrier and 3,500 km
industrial lines, all on Taiwan; common-carrier lines consist
of West System: 825 km meter gage (1.00 m) with 325 km
double track, complete line under construction for electrifi-
cation; East Line: 175 km narrow gage (0.762 m) (presently
under construction to convert to meter gage compatible with
West System); common-carrier lines owned by government
and operated by Railway Administration (TRA) under
Ministry of Communications; industrial lines owned and
operated by government enterprises
Highways: network totals 16,900 km (construction of
North-South Freeway approximately 84%-250 km-com-
plete), plus 483 km on Penghu and offshore islands; 7,564
km paved, 6,276 km gravel and crushed stone, 2,736 km
earth
Pipelines: 615 km refined products, 97 km natural gas
Ports: 5 major, 5 minor
Airfields: 38 total, 36 usable; 26 with permanent-surface
runways; 11 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 12 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
40
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July 1978
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CHINA, REPUBLIC OF/COLOMBIA
GOVERNMENT
DEFENSE FORCES 3 328,000 fit Legal name: Republic of Colombia
manpower: males 15-49, 4,146,000; Type: republic; executive branch dominates
Military
for military service; about 199,000 currently reach military
structure
age (19) annually Capital: Bogota 5
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
including personnel costs; about 52.5% of political subdivisions: Districtts, 3 Intendants,
$1,814.7 million iCorn religious courts
central government budget Legal system: based on Spanish law;
A divorce; constitution decreed in 1886,
COLOMBIA
LAND
1,139,600 km2; settled area 28% consisting o acd wane 6%,
fallow 5%, pastures 14%, woodland, swamps,
urban and other 3%; unsettled area 72%_mostly forest and
savannah
Land boundaries: 6,035
regulate marriage an
amendments codified in 1946 and 1968; judicial review o
legislative acts in the Supreme Court; accepts compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction, with na reservations Day, 30 July
National holiday: I
Branches: President,
leader: President Alfonso LopezuMichelsen
Government
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: every fourth Year- last presidential and
congressional elections April 1974; municipal and depart-
mental elections, April 1976 president
Political parties and leaders: Liberal Party, Alvaro
Alfonso Lopez Michelsen; Conservative Party,
Gomez Hurtado; Alianza Nazional Popular, Maria Eugenia
Rojas de Moreno
Voting strength: 1974 presidential election-Alfonso
Lopez Michelsen 55%, Alvaro Gomez Hurtado 32%, Maria
Eugenia Rojas de Moreno 9.5%; 1976 municipal
combined
52% Liberal Party, 40% Conservative Party,
n of eligible voters
i
o
far left parties; 70% abstent
Communists: 10,000-12,000 members est. munist Party
Other political or pressure groups: Corn
(PCC), Gilberto Vieira White; PCC/ML, Chinese Line
Communist Party IAEA, IBRD, ICAO,
Member of: FAO, G-77, IADB,
ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, LAFTA
(created in May 1969
WATER 12 nm (fishing 200
Limits of territorial waters (claimed):
nm)
Coastline: 2,414 km
PEOPLE 1978), average annual
population: 25,559,000 (July
growth rate 2.2% (current) adjective-Colombian
Nationality: noun-Colombian(s);
Ethnic %ivis gro, 38%mixed1Negro-Indian, 1%nInd an
mulatto, 4
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 47% of population over
47% years agriculture, 13%
Labor force: 5.6 million (1966);
manufacturing, 18% services, 9% Commerce, 13% other
(1964); 10%-13% unemployment (1975)
(1968)
Organized labor: 13% of labor force
and Andean Sub-RegiGr N >
UNESCO, UPEB, UPU,
within LAFTA), OAS, SELA,
WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY per
GNP: $16.32 billion, est. (1976, in 1976 prices), $710
capita; 76% private consul 2o net ion, foreign balance (1975); real
18% gross investment, 2%
growth rate (1977), 5.5%; average real growth rate (1972-76
6.5%
coffee, rice, corn, sugarcane,
Agriculture: main crops-
plantains, bananas, per cotton, tobacco; caloric intake, 2,140 capita calories per day p xports $10.6
Fishing: catch 66,575 metric tons 1975; exports
million (1973), imports $10.3 million (1973)
clothing and
Major industries: textiles, food processing, c
footwear, beverages, chemicals, and metal products kg
Crude steel: 356,000 metric tons produced (1976), 15
per capita
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COLOMBIA/COMOROS
bjlEle k,iPower: 4,650,000 kW capacity (1977); 13.8
produced (1977), 540 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,866 million (f.o.b., 1977); cotton, tobacco, sugar, textiles, cattle and coffee,
hides fuel oil,
Imports: $1,991 million (f.o.b., 1977); equipment, machinery, industrial metals and ratransportation
w materials,
chemicals and pharmaceuticals, fuels, fertilizers, paper and
paper Products, foodstuffs and beverages
Major trade partners: exports-48% Japan, 27% U.S.,
16% Germany, 10% Venezuela, 6% Netherlands; imports-
38% U.S., 9% Germany, 8% Japan, 5% Ecuador (1976)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S.
million loans, (FY46-76), $991
$325 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75)
$1
8
,
.
billion; from other Western
countries (1960-71), $77.6 million; from Communist coun-
tries (1968-75), $82 million ($2.7 million drawn); military-
assistance from U.S. (FY46-76), $130 million
Budget: (1978) revenues $2.09 billion; expenditures $2.30
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 37.70
(November 1977, changes frequently)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,436 km, all 0.914-meter gage,
km electrified single track, 35
Highways: 56,650 km total; 8,200 km paved, 41,750 km
crushed stone or gravel, 6,700 km improved earth
Inland waterways: 14,300 km, navigable by river boats
Pipelines: crude oil 3
, ,585 km; refined products, 1,350
km; natural gas, 830 km; natural gas liquids, 125 km
Ports: 5 major, 5 minor
Civil air: 90 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 722 total, 680 usable; 44 with permanent-
surface runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m; 5 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 86 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 11
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: nationwide radio-relay system; 1
Atlantic Ocean satellite station; 1.34 million telephones (5.5
per 100 popl.); 325 AM, 130 FM, and 48 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 5,502,000; 3,594,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually about 260000
,
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year
December 1978, $181.8 million; about 7.7%
government budget
COMOROS
ending 31
of central
LAND
2,170 km2; 4 main islands; forests 16%, pasture 7%,
cultivable area 48%, non-cultivable area 29%
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 340 km
PEOPLE
Population: 317,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.1% (current)
Nationality: noun_Comoran(s); adjective-Comoran
Ethnic divisions: mixture of Arab, Malay, Negroid
Religion: Predominantly Islamic
Language: French, Arabic, Swahili
Literacy: presumably low
Labor force: mainly agricultural
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of the Comoros
Type: three of the four islands comprise an independent
republic, following local government's unilateral declaration
of independence from France in July 1975; other island,
Mayotte, disallowed declaration and is now a French
Territorial community
Capital: Moroni
Political subdivisions: the three islands are organized into
7 regions; these regions are broken down into 55 to 60
"Moudirias" or regional council centers; the "Bayous" are
the Principle units of local government and they are grouped
together to form the "Moudirias"
Legal system: French and Muslim law
Branches: Ali Soilih elected President of the Comoros,
April 1977; he immediately reorganized the Central
Government into 4 major components: the Presidency,
internal affairs Central Committee, external affairs Central
Committee, and a Supreme Court
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: last election took place April 1977; date of next
election unknown
Communists: information not available
Member of. G-77, NAM, OAU, U.N.
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COMOROS / CONGO
ECONOMY
GDP: $69.5 million (1975), about $200 per capita; growth
probably negligible through 1974
Agriculture: food crops-rice, manioc, maize, fruits,
vegetables; export crops-essential oils for perfumes (mainly
ylang-ylang), vanilla, copra, cloves
Exports: $10.3 million (f.o.b., 1976); perfume oils, vanilla,
copra, cloves
Imports: $13.9 million (c.i.f., 1976); foodstuffs, cement,
fuels, chemicals, textiles
Major trade partners: France, Malagasy Republic, Italy,
Kenya, Tanzania and U.S.
Electric power: 2,400 kW capacity (1977); 3 million kWh
produced (1977); 10 kWh per capita
Aid: French aid in 1971 was about $2.7 million, or about
50% of the island's entire budget; Arab League, $10 million
in 1976
Budget: 1977 projected-revenues, $5 million; current
expenditures, $11 million; investment expenditures, $5
million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine (CFA) francs=US$1 as of November 1977,
floating
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 999 km total; approximately 295 km bitumi-
nous, remainder crushed stone or gravel
Ports: 1 minor (Moroni on Grande Comore)
Civil air: 4 major transports (2 registered in France)
Airfields: 5 total, 5 usable; 5 with permanent surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: sparse system of HF radiocom-
munication stations for interisland, island and external
communications to Malagasy and Reunion; 1,100 telephones
(0.3 per 100 pop1.); 2 AM, 1 FM, and no TV stations
CONGO
LAND
349,650 kmz; 63% dense forest or woodland, 33%
cultivable or grazing (2% cultivated est.), 4% urban or waste
Land boundaries: 4,514 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 30 nm
Coastline: 169 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,464,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Congolese (sing., pl.); adjective-
Congolese or Congo
Ethnic divisions: about 15 ethnic groups divided into
some 75 tribes, almost all Bantu; most important ethnic
groups are Kongo (48%) in south, Teke (17%) in center,
M'Bochi (12%) and Sangha (20%) in north; about 8,500
Europeans, mostly French
Religion: about half animist, half nominally Christian, less
than 1% Muslim
Language: French official, many African languages with
Lingala and Kikongo most widely used
Literacy: about 20%
Labor force: about 40% of population economically
active, most engaged in subsistence agriculture; 79,100 wage
earners; 40,000-60,000 unemployed
Organized labor: 16% of total labor force (1965 est.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of the Congo
Type: republic; military regime established September
1968
Capital: Brazzaville
Political subdivisions: 9 regions divided into districts
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1973
National holiday: National Day, 15 August
Branches: President, Military Committee, Council of
State; judiciary; all policy made by Congolese Workers Party
Central Committee and Politburo
Government leaders: President, Brigadier General
Joachim Yhombi-Opango; Prime Minister Louis Goma
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: last legislative elections June 1973
Political parties and leaders: Congolese Workers Party
(PCT) is only legal party
Communists: unknown number of Communists and
sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: Union of Congolese
Socialist Youth (UJSC), Congolese Trade Union Congress
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(CSC), Revolutionary Union of Congolese Union (URFC),
General Union of Congolese Pupils and Students (UCEEC)
Member of: AFDB, Conference of East and Central
African States, EAMA, ECA, EIB (associate), FAO, G-77,
GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU,
UDEAC, UEAC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: about $700 million (1977 est.), $524 per capita; real
growth rate about 3% per year (1970-77)
Agriculture: cash crops-sugarcane, wood, coffee, cocoa,
palm kernels, peanuts, tobacco; food crops-root-crops, rice,
corn, bananas, manioc, fish
Fishing: catch 15,674 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: crude oil, sawmills, brewery, cigarettes,
sugar mill, soap
Electric power: 63,200 kW capacity (1977); 130 million
kWh produced (1977), 90 kWh per capita
Exports: $214 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); oil (58%), lumber,
sugar, tobacco, veneer, and plywood
Imports: $266 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); machinery,
transport equipment, manufactured consumer goods, iron
and steel, foodstuffs, petroleum products
Major trade partners: France and other EC countries
Budget: 1977 est.-revenue $216 million, expenditures
$240 million
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 800 km, 1,067-meter gage, single track
Highways: 8,246 km total; 535 km bituminous surface
treated; remainder gravel, laterite, or improved earth
Inland waterways: 6,485 km navigable
Pipelines: crude oil 25 km
Ports: 1 major (Pointe Noire)
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 68 total, 51 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 20 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: services adequate for government
and public; network is comprised of low-capacity,
low-powered radiocommunication stations, coaxial cables
and wire lines; key centers are Brazzaville, Pointe-Noire, and
Loubomo; 10,500 telephones (0.7 per 100 popl.); 3 AM
stations, 1 FM station, and 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 340,000; 169,000 fit for
military service; about 14,000 reach military age (20)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $37,517,400; about 17% of central government budget
COOK ISLANDS
K APp UINEA~ :
LAND
About 240 km2
COOK
ISLANDS
NEW
ZEA
L ND
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 3 nm
Coastline: about 120 km
PEOPLE
Population: 18,000 (total from the census of 1 December
1976)
Nationality: noun-Cook Islander(s); adjective-Cook
Islander
Ethnic divisions: 81.3% Polynesian (full blood), 7.7%
Polynesian and European, 7.7% Polynesian and other, 2.4%
European, 0.9% other
Religion: Christian, majority of populace members of
Cook Islands Christian Church
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Cook Islands
Type: self-governing in "free association" with New
Zealand; Cook Islands government fully responsible for
internal affairs and has right at any time to move to full
independence by unilateral action; New Zealand retains
responsibility for external affairs, in consultation with Cook
Islands government
Capital: Rarotonga
Branches: New Zealand Governor General appoints
Representative to Cook Islands, who represents the Queen
and the New Zealand government; Representative appoints
the Premier; Legislative Assembly of 22 members, popularly
elected; House of Arikis (chiefs), 15 members, appointed by
Representative, an advisory body only
Government leader: Premier Albert Henry
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: every 4 years, latest in March 1978
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July 1978
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COOK ISLANDS/COSTA RICA
Political parties and leaders: Cook Islands Party, Sir
Albert Henry; Democratic Party, Dr. Thomas Davis
Voting strength (1978): Cook Islands Party, 15 seats;
Democratic Party, 7 seats
ECONOMY (1973)
GDP: $400 per capita
crops include copra, citrus fruits,
Agriculture: export
with
pineapples, tomatoes, and bananas, subsistence crops of
yams and taro
Industry: fruit processing 10 million
Electric power: 3,000 kW capacity (1977);
kWh produced (1977), 525 kWh per capita
Exports: $2.7 million (1971); fruit juice, clothing, citrus
fruits
Imports: $5.8 million (1971)
Major trade partners: (1970) exports-98% New Zealand,
imports-76% New Zealand, 7% Japan .9947 (July
Monetary conversion rate: 1 NZ$=US$0
1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 260 km total; 19 km paved, 109 km gravel, 84
km improved earth, 48 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: none
Ports: 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
-2,439
Airfy 2,3 17 total, ith natural surface runways n1,220
runway
m; 1 seaplane station FM, and no TV stations;
Telecommunications: 6 AM, no
7,000 radio receivers, and 956 telephones
COSTA RICA
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish
Literacy: about 90%
Labor force: 657,709 (1976); 32.6% agriculture; 13.8%
manufacturing; 15.3% commerce; 6.1% construction; 5.2%
transportation, utilities; 20.3% service (government, educa-
tion, social); 0.5% other; 6.2% unemployment (1976)
Organized labor: about 11.5% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Costa Rica
Type: unitary republic
Capital: San Jose
Political subdivisions: 7 provinces
Legal system: based on Spanish civil law system;
constitution adopted 1949; judicial review of legislative acts
in the Supreme Court; legal education ICJ iversityt of Costa n
Rica; has not accepted compulsory 15 September
National holiday: Independence Day,
Branches: President, unicameral legislature, Supreme
Court elected by legislature
Government leader: President Rodrigo Carazo Odio
Suffrage: universal and compulsory age 18 and over
Elections: every 4 years; next, February 1982
Political parties and leaders: National Li e tiioMParty
(PLN), Daniel Oduber, Luis Alberto Monge, Carlos Rodrigo
Castillo; Democratic Renovation Party DC) J arlorge rig
Carazo; Christian Democratic Party
Zamora; Popular Vanguard Party (PVP, Communist),
Manuel Mora Valverde; Republican Calderonista Party
(PRC), Rafael Angel Calderon Fournier; Popular Union
Party (PUP), San Joaquin Trejos Fernandez; Unity Coalition
composed of the PRD, the PDC, the PUP, and the PRC
Voting strength (1978 election): Unity Coalition 433.P4%,
27 seats; PLN 38.8%, 25 seats; Leftist Coalition Party
7.6%, 3 seats; others, 2 seats
Communists: 3,200 members, 10,000 sympathizers
LAND
51,000 km2; 30% agricultural land (8% cultivated, 22%
meadows and pasture), 60% forested, 10% waste, urban, and
other
Land boundaries: 670 km
WATER (fishing 200
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
nm; specialized competence over living resources to 200 nm)
Coastline: 1,290 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,119,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.3% (current) adjective-Costa
Nationality: noun-Costa Rican(s); a
Rican
Ethnic divisions: 98% white (including mestizo), 2%
Negro
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COSTA RICA/CUBA
Other political or pressure groups: Costa Rican Confed-
eration of Democratic Workers (CCTD), General Confeder-
ation of Workers (CGT), Chamber of Coffee Growers,
National Association for Economic Development (ANFE)
Member of: CALM
F
,
AO, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, 1DB, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, IWC-International
Wheat Council, NAMUCAR (Caribbean Multinational
Shipping Line-Naviera Multinacional del Carihe), OAS,
ODECA, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPEB, UPU, WHO
W M0
ECONOMY
GDP: $2.3 billion (1976, .in 1976 dollars), $1,135 per
capita; 72% private consumption, 17% public consumption,
23% gross domestic investment, - 12% net foreign balance
(1975); real growth rate 1977, 6.9%; average growth
(1972-76), 6.0%
Agriculture: main products-bananas, coffee, sugarcane,
rice, corn, cocoa, livestock products; caloric intake, 2,610
calories per day per capita (1966)
Fishing: catch 15,695 metric tons (1975); exports, $3.7
million (1974), imports, $0.6 million (1974)
Major industries: food processing, textiles and clothing,
construction materials, fertilizer
Electric power: 410,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.7 billion
kWh produced (1977), 855 kWh per capita
Exports: $770 million (f.o.b., 1977); coffee, bananas, beef,
sugar, cacao
Imports: $840 million (c.i.f., 1977); manufactured prod-
ucts, machinery, transportation equipment, chemicals, fuels,
foodstuffs, fertilizer
Major trade partners: exports-32% U.S., 24% CACM,
13% West Germany
im
ports-04% U.S., 16% CACM, 6%
West Germany, 10% Japan (1974)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-75), $138
million loans, $117 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $349 million; from other Western
countries (1960-71), $7.7 million; military-assistance from
U.S. (FY60-76), $2.0 million; Communist- (economic) from
U.S.S.R., $17 million (1971)
Monetary conversion
Fiscal year: calendar
8.57 colones=US$1
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 563 km 1.067-meter gage, all single track, 115
km electrified
Highways: 25,600 km total; 1,950 km paved, 7,450 km
gravel 16,200 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: about 730 km perennially navigable
Pipelines: refined products, 318 km
Ports: 3 major (Limon, Golfito, Puntarenas), 4 minor
Civil air: 20 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 186 total, 177 usable; 29 with permanent-
surface runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 10 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: good domestic telephone service;
127,000 telephones (6.2 per 100 popl.); connection into
Central American microwave net; 55 AM, 10 FM, and 12
TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 460,000; 301,000 fit for
military service; average number reaching military age (18)
annually about 26,000
Supply: dependent on imports from U.S.
Military6
$ budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978,
1
.2
million for Ministry of Public Security, including
the
dge Civil Guard; about 3% of total central government
b
t
CUBA
LAND
114,478 km2; 35% cultivated, 30% meadow and pasture,
20% waste, urban, or other, 15% forested
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 3,735 km
PEOPLE
Population: 9,797,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Cuban(s); adjective-Cuban
Ethnic divisions: 51% mulatto, 37% white, 11%
1 % Chinese
Religion: at least 85% nominally Roman Catholic
Castro assumed power
Language: Spanish
Literacy: about 96%
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CUBA/CYPRUS
Labor force: 2.7 million in 1976; 33% agriculture, 17%
industry, 9% construction, 7% transportation, 32% services,
2% unemployed
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Cuba
Type: Communist state
Capital: Havana
Political subdivisions: 14 provinces and 169 munici-
palities
Legal system: based on Spanish and American
Fundamental
large elements of Communist legal theory; Fun
Law of 1959 replaced Constitution of 1940; a new
constitution was approved at the Cuban Communist Party's
First Party Congress in December 1975 and by a popular
referendum which took place on 15 February 1976; portions
of the new constitution were put into effect on 24 February
1976, by means of a Constitutional Transition Law, and the
entire constitution became effective on 2 December 1976;
legal education at Universities of Havana, Oriente, and Las
Villas; does not accept compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Anniversary of the Revolution, 1
January
Branches: executive; legislature (National People's Assem-
bly); controlled judiciary
Government leader: President Fidel Castro Ruz
Suffrage: universal, but not compulsory, over age 16
Elections: National People's Assembly (indirect election)
every five years; election held November 1976
Political parties and leaders: Cuban Communist Party
(PCC), First Secretary Fidel Castro Ruz, Second Secretary
Raul Castro Ruz
Communists: approx. 200,000 party members
Member of: CEMA, ECLA, FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB
(nonparticipant), ICAO, IHO, ILO, IMCO, International
Rice Commission, ISO, IWC-International Wheat Council,
ITU, NAM, NAMUCAR (Caribbean Multinational Shipping
Line-Naviera Multinacional del Caribe), OAS (nonpartici-
pant), Permanent Court of Arbitration, Postal Union of the
Americas and Spain, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WSG
Shortages: spare parts for transportation and industrial
machinery, consumer goods
Crude steel: 0.35 million metric tons capacity (planned);
240,000 metric tons produced (1975); 25 kg per capita
Electric power: 1,936,000 kW capacity (1977); 6.6 billion
kWh produced (1977), 700 kWh per capita
Exports: $3.3 billion (f.o.b., 1976); sugar, nickel, tobacco
Imports: $3.7 billion (c.i.f., 1976); capital goods, industrial
raw materials, food, petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-65% U.S.S.R., 15% other
Communist countries; imports-49% U.S.S.R., 14% other
Communist countries, 6% Spain (1976)
Budget: $11.1 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 peso=US$1.21 (nominal)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 14,640 km total, government-owned; 5,040 km
common-carrier lines of which 4,960 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 80 km 0.914-meter gage; about 9,600 km
plantation/ industrial lines, 6,400 km standard gage (1.435
m), 3,200 narrow gage
Highways: 20,700 km total; 8,800 km paved, 11,900 km
gravel and earth surfaced
Inland waterways: 240 km
Pipelines: natural gas, 80 km
Ports: 8 major (including U.S. Naval Base at Guantan-
amo), 44 minor; Guantanamo under U.S. control
Civil air: 34 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 194 total, 183 usable; 47 with permanent-
surface runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 in, 8 with
runways 2,440-3,659 in, 25 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 10
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: modern facilities adequately serve
military, governmental, and some civilian needs; excellent
international facilities via HF and satellite; 380,000 tele-
phones (3.9 per 100 popl.); 100 AM, 25 FM, and 24 TV
stations; 4 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1978
(last announced budget), $949 million; about 8.6% of total
budget
ECONOMY
GDP: $8.0 billion (1976 est., in 1976 prices), $830 per
capita; 60% private consumption, 20% public consumption,
20% gross investment; real growth rate 1976, 3.5%
Agriculture: main crops-sugar, tobacco, coffee, rice,
potatoes, tubers, citrus fruits
Fishing: catch 183,000 metric tons (1976); exports $63
million (1975), imports $24.4 million (1973)
Major industries: sugar milling, petroleum refining, food
and tobacco processing, textiles, chemicals, paper and wood
products, metals
CYPRUS
LAND
9,251 km'; 47% arable and land under permanent crops,
18% forested, 10% meadows and pasture, 25% waste, urban
areas, and other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
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PEOPLE
Population: 641,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.2% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Cypriot(s); adjective-Cypriot
Ethnic divisions: 78% Greek; 18% Turkish; 4% British,
Armenian, and other
Religion: 78% Greek Orthodox, 18% Muslim, 4% Mason-
ite Armenian Apostolic and other
Language: Greek, Turkish, English
Literacy: about 82% of population 7 years or older
Greek Sector labor force: 207,700 (1975), 22% agricul-
ture, forestry, fishing, 12% manufacturing, 4% construction,
1% mining and quarrying, 13% services, 10% trade and
finance, 3% transport and communications, 5% public
administration, 30% other; unemployment 7% (1976)
Turkish Sector labor force: 179,400 (145,900 employed,
33,500 unemployed); 31% agriculture, 18% services, 17%
manufacturing, 12% wholesale and retail trade, 22% other
(1975)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Cyprus
Type: republic since August 1960; separate de facto Greek
Cypriot, and Turkish Cypriot governments have evolved
since outbreak of communal strife in 1963; this separation
was further solidified following the Turkish invasion of the
island in July 1974; negotiations, which have been going on
since January 1975, have focused on the creation of a federal
system of government with substantial autonomy for each of
the two communities
Capital: Nicosia
Political subdivisions: 6 administrative districts
Legal system: based on common law, with civil law
modifications; negotiations to create the basis for a new or
revised constitution to govern the island and relations
between Greek and Turkish Cypriots have been going on
intermittently
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 October
Branches: currently a rump government with effective
authority only over the Greek Cypriot community, consist-
ing of Greek Cypriot parts of bodies provided for by
constitution; headed by President of the Republic and
comprised of Council of Ministers, House of Representatives,
and Supreme Court; Turkish Cypriots have their own
"Constitution" and governing bodies within the "Federated
Turkish State of Cyprus"
Government leaders: President, Spyros Kyprianou,
elected interim President in September 1977, to serve out
the remainder of the term of Archbishop Makarios who died
on 3 August 1977, and elected President in his own right by
acclamation in February 1978 (Greek); "President," Rauf
Denktash (Turk); "Prime Minister," Osman Orek (Turk)
Suffrage: universal age 21 and over
Elections: officially every 5 years; Turkish Cypriot
"Presidential" and "Parliamentary" elections held June
1976; Greek Cypriot parliamentary elections held in
September 1976; Greek Cypriot presidential election to be
held in February 1978
Political parties and leaders: Restorative Party of the
Working People (AKEL) (Communist Party), Ezekias
Papaioannou; Democratic Rally (DR), Glafkos Clerides;
Democratic Party (DP) (pro-Makarios), Spyros Kyprianou;
United Democratic Union of the Center (EDEK), Vassos
Lyssarides; National Unity Party, Rauf Denktash; Populist
Party, Alper Orhon; Republican Turkish Cypriot Party,
Ahmet Berberoglou; Communal Salvation Party, Alpay
Durduran; Republic Turkish Cypriot Party (RTCP), Ozker
Ozgur
Voting strength: Rauf Denktash won the 1976 "Presiden-
tial" contest in the Turkish Cypriot zone with 76% of the
vote and his party won 30 of 40 seats in the "Assembly" with
54% of the vote; a pro-Makarios coalition composed of
AKEL, EDEK, and the DF received 75% of the vote in the
September 1976 Greek Cypriot parliamentary election and
34 of 35 seats while Clerides' DM won 25% of the vote and
no seats; the remaining seat was given to an independent
Communists: 12,000; sympathizers estimated to number
60,000
Other political or pressure groups: United Democratic
Youth Organization (EDON) (Communist-controlled); Pan
Cyprian Labor Federation (PEO) (Communist-controlled);
Cyprus Confederation of Labor (SEK) (pro-West); Cyprus
Turkish Federation of Trade Unions (KTIBF); Confeder-
ation of Revolutionary Worker Unions (DISK); Turkish
Cypriot Federation of Labor Union
Member of: Commonwealth, Council of Europe, FAO,
G-77,GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF,
ITU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
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ECONOMY
GNP: $789.3 million (1976), $1,580 per capita; 1976 real
growth rate 14.6%
Agriculture: main crops-vine products, citrus, potatoes,
other vegetables; food shortages-grain, dairy products,
meat, fish; caloric intake, 2,460 calories per day per capita
(1964-66)
Major industries: mining (cupreous and iron pyrites,
asbestos), manufactures principally for local consumption-
food, beverages, footwear, clothing, cement
Shortages: water, petroleum
Electric power: 338,000 kW capacity (1977); 880 million
kWh produced (1977), 1,375 kWh per capita
Exports: $319 million (f.o.b., 1977, converted at average
trade conversion factor of 1 Cyprus pound=US$2.451);
principal items-asbestos, copper, pyrites, citrus, raisins, and
other agricultural products, potatoes, cement, clothing,
footwear, wine
Turkish Sector exports: $15.7 million (f.o.b., 1976, con-
verted at average conversion factor of 16.053 Turkish
lira=US$1); principal items-citrus fruits, potatoes, manu-
factured goods
Imports: $623 million (c.i.f., 1977, converted at average
trade conversion factor of 1 Cyprus pound=US$2.451);
principal items-manufactured goods, machinery and trans-
port equipment, petroleum products, foods
Turkish Sector imports: $65.9 million (c.i.f., 1976, con-
verted at average trade conversion factor of 16.053 Turkish
lira=US$1); principal items are foodstuffs, livestock, raw
materials, oil, machinery
Major trade partners: (1977) imports-19% U.K., 9%
Italy, 8% Greece, 8% West Germany, 6% U.S., 5% France;
exports-29% U.K., 13% Saudi Arabia, 9% Lebanon, 5%
Libya, 4% Egypt, 3% U.S.S.R., 3% Greece, 3% Syria
Turkish Sector major trade partners: (1976) imports-
48% Turkey, 22% U.K., 7% West Germany, 5% France, 3%
Netherlands, 3% Italy; exports-33% U.K., 29% Turkey, 18%
Netherlands, 10% Italy
Aid: economic-U.S., $49 million authorized (FY70-76);
other Western bilateral authorizations (ODA and OOF), $34
million (1970-76); Greece, $79 million (1976)
Turkish Sector aid: Turkey, $70 million (1974-76)
Budget: 1977-revenues $167.6 million, expenditures
$229.4 million, deficit $61.8 million
Turkish Sector budget: revenues $38 million, expendi-
tures $78 million, deficit $40 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Cyprus pound=US$2.61
(December 1971 through January 1973), 1 Cyprus
pound=US$2.4510 (trade conversion factor for 1977)
Turkish Sector monetary conversion rate: 18.002 Turk-
ish 1ira=US$1 (trade conversion factor for 1977)
Fiscal year: calendar year
NOTE: 1974, 1975, 1976, and 1977 GNP, import, export,
and budget figures are Government of Cyprus figures which
include 100% of island until August 1974 and 60% of island
thereafter; the Turkish sector of island for last 4 months of
1974 is part of Turkish mainland economy; with the passage
of time, some information on the Turkish sector of the island
has become available.
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 9,710 km total; 4,580 km bituminous surface
treated; 5,130 km gravel, crushed stone, and earth
Ports: 3 major (Famagusta, Larnaca, Limassol), 6 minor;
Famagusta under Turkish control
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft, all leased in
Airfields: 13 total, 12 usable; 8 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 4 with runways
2,440-3,656 m
Telecommunications: moderately good telecommunica-
tion system; 77,000 telephones (11.2 per 100 pop1.); 12 AM, 4
FM, and 5 TV stations; tropospheric scatter circuits to
Greece and Turkey; 2 submarine coaxial cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $33.7 million about 14% of central government budget
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
LAND
127,946 km'; 42% arable, 14% other agricultural, 35%
forested, 9% other
Land boundaries: 3,540 km
PEOPLE
Population: 15,136,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 0.7% (current)
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Nationality: noun-Czechoslovak(s); adjective-Czecho-
slovak
Ethnic divisions: 64.3% Czechs, 30.0% Slovaks, 4.0%
Magyars, 0.6% Germans, 0.5% Poles, 0.4% Ukrainians, 0.2%
others (Jews, Gypsies)
Religion: 77% Roman Catholic, 20% Protestant, 2%
Orthodox, 1% other
Language: Czech, Slovak, Hungarian
Literacy: almost complete
Labor force: 7.4 million; 14% agriculture, 38.6% industry,
11% services, 36.4% construction, communications and
others
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (C.S.S.R.)
Type: Communist state
Capital: Prague
Political subdivisions: 2 ostensibly separate and nomi-
nally autonomous republics (Czech Socialist Republic and
Slovak Socialist Republic); 7 regions (kraj) in Czech lands,
three regions in Slovakia; national capitals of Prague and
Bratislava have regional status
Legal system: civil law system based on Austrian-
Hungarian codes, modified by Communist legal theory;
revised constitution adopted 1960, amended in 1968 and
1970; no judicial review of legislative acts; legal education at
Karlova University School of Law; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Liberation Day, 9 May
Branches: executive-President (elected by Federal As-
sembly), cabinet (appointed by President); legislative-
Federal Assembly (elected directly), Czech and Slovak
National Councils (also elected directly) legislate on limited
area of regional matters; judiciary-Supreme Court (elected
by Federal Assembly); entire governmental structure domi-
nated by Communist Party
Government leaders: President Gustav Husak (elected
May 1975), Premier Lubomir Strougal
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: governmental bodies every 5 years (last
election, October 1976); President every 5 years
Dominant political party and leader: Communist Party
of Czechoslovakia (KSC), Gustav Husak, General Secretary;
Communist Party of Slovakia (KSS) has status of "provincial
KSC organization"
Voting strength (1976 election): 99.7% for Communist-
sponsored single slate
Communists: 1.38 million party members (April 1976)
Other political groups: puppet parties-Czechoslovak
Socialist Party, Czechoslovak People's Party, Slovak Free-
dom Party, Slovak Revival Party
Member of: CEMA, FAO, GATT, IAEA, ICAO, IDA,
IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO,
IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, Warsaw Pact,
WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $59.9 billion in 1977 (in 1976 dollars), $3,985 per
capita; 1977 real growth rate 3.4%
Agriculture: diversified agriculture; main crops-wheat,
rye, potatoes, sugar beets; net food importer-meat, wheat,
vegetable oils, fresh fruits and vegetables; caloric intake,
3,100 calories per day per capita (1967)
Major industries: machinery, food processing, metal-
lurgy, textiles, chemicals
Shortages: ores, crude oil
Crude steel: 15.1 million metric tons produced (1977),
1,000 kg per capita
Electric power: 15.2 million kW capacity (1977); 66.4
billion kWh produced (1977), 4,395 kWh per capita
Exports: $10,970 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); 50% machin-
ery, equipment; 29% fuels, raw materials; 4% foods, food
products, and live animals; 18% consumer goods, excluding
foods (1976)
Imports: $11,100 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); 37% machin-
ery, equipment; 47% fuels, raw materials; 10% foods, food
products, and live animals; 7% consumer goods, excluding
foods (1976)
Monetary conversion rate: noncommercial 10.15
crowns=US$1, commercial 5.64 crowns=US$l
Fiscal year. calendar year
NOTE: foreign trade figures were converted at the rate of
6.77 crowns=US$1
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 13,186 km total; 12,881 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 112 km broad gage (1.524 m), 193 km narrow
gage (0.750 m and 0.760 m); 2,807 km double track; 2,714
km electrified; government-owned (1975)
Highways: 73,677 km total; 60,157 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block; 13,520 km gravel, crushed stone (1976)
Inland waterways: 483 km (1977)
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,448 km; refined products, 861 km;
natural gas, 5,601 km
Freight carried: rail-275.5 million metric tons, 70.7
billion metric ton/km (1976); highway-1,048.3 million
metric tons, 16.3 billion metric ton/km (1976); waterway-
6.8 million metric tons, 3.0 billion metric ton/km (excl. int'l.
transit traffic) in approximately 417 waterway craft with
350,000 metric ton capacity (1977)
Ports: no maritime ports; outlets are Gdynia, Gdansk, and
Szczecin in Poland; Rijeka and Koper in Yugoslavia;
Hamburg, FRG; Rostock, GDR; principal river ports are
Prague, Melnik, Usti nad Labem, Decin, Komarno, Bra-
tislava (1977)
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CZECHOSLOVAKIA/DENMARK
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: announced for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, est. 19.5 billion crowns, about 7.1% of total
budget
DENMARK
LAND
42,994 km2 (exclusive of Greenland and Faroe Islands);
64% arable, 8% meadows and pastures, 11% forested, 17%
other
Land boundaries: 68 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 3,379 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,106,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Dane(s); adjective-Danish
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous white population
Religion: 96% Evangelical Lutheran, 3% other Protestant
and Roman Catholic, 1% other
Language: Danish; small German-speaking minority
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 2.6 million; 9.5% agriculture, forestry,
fishing, 26.6% manufacturing, 8.3% construction, 15.7%
commerce, 6.8% transportation, 5.6% services, 25.7% govern-
ment, 1.8% other; 6.5% (167,000) of registered labor force
unemployed (1977 annual average)
Organized labor: 65% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Denmark
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Copenhagen
Political subdivisions: 14 counties, 277 communes, 88
towns
Legal system: civil law system; constitution adopted 1953;
judicial review of legislative acts; legal education at
Universities of Copenhagen and Arhus; accepts compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Birthday of the Queen, 16 April
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with Crown
and parliament (Folketing); executive power vested in
Crown but exercised by cabinet responsible to parliament;
Supreme Court, 2 superior courts, 106 lower courts
Government leaders: Queen Margrethe II; Prime Minis-
ter, Anker Jorgensen
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: on call of prime minister but at least every four
years (last election 15 February 1977)
Political parties and leaders: Social Democratic, Anker
Jorgensen; Liberal, Henning Christopherson (interim party
chairman) Conservative, Poul Schluter; Radical Liberal,
Kristen Helveg Petersen; Socialist Peoples, Gert Petersen;
Communist, Joergen Jensen; Left Socialist, Preben Wilhjelm;
Center Democratic, Erhard Jakobsen; Christian People's,
Jens Moller; Justice, Ib Christensen; Communist League
Marxist-Leninest, Benito Scocozza
Voting strength (1977 election): 37.5% Social Democratic,
14.3% Progressive, 12.3% Moderate Liberals, 8.3% Conserva-
tive, 6.4% Center Democratic, 3.9% Socialist Peoples, 3.7%
Communist, 3.6% Radical Liberal, 3.5% Christian, 3.2%
Justice, 2.7% Leftist Socialist
Communists: 7,500-8,000; a number of sympathizers, as
indicated by 114,034 Communist votes cast in 1977 elections
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EC, EEC,
ELDO (observer), EMA, ESRD, EURATOM, FAO, GATT,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO,
IMF, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council, NATO, Nordic Council, OECD, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $43.7 billion (1977), $8,750 per capita; 58% private
consumption, 20% investment, 25% government, - 2.5% net
foreign sector and stock building (1977); 1977 growth rate
0.5%, constant prices
Agriculture: highly intensive, specializes in dairying and
animal husbandry; main crops-cereals, root crops; food
imports-oilseeds, grain, feedstuffs; caloric intake, 3,180
calories per day per capita (1968-69)
Fishing: catch 1.88 million metric tons, exports $507
million (1976)
Major industries: food processing, machinery and equip-
ment, textiles and clothing, chemical products, electronics,
transport equipment, metal products, brick and mortar,
furniture and other wood products
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Crude steel: 722,000 metric tons produced (1976), 140 kg
per capita
Electric power: 7,400,000 kW capacity (1977); 23.9
billion kWh produced (1977), 4,695 kWh per capita
Exports: $10.1 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
meat, dairy products, industrial machinery and equipment,
textiles and clothing, chemical products, transport equip-
ment, fish, furs, and furniture
Imports: $13.3 billion (c.i.f., 1977); principal items-
industrial machinery, transport equipment, petroleum,
textile fibers and yarns, iron and steel products, chemicals,
grain and feedstuffs, wood and paper
Major trade partners: 46.5% EC-nine (18.1% West
Germany, 13.1% U.K.); 14.9% Sweden; 5.4% U.S.; 4.2%
Communist countries (1976)
Aid: donor-bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF) $717 million (1970-76)
Budget: (FY77) expenditures $20.3 billion, revenues $20.1
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 6.0031 Kroner=US$1 (1977,
average exchange rate)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,591 km standard gage (1.435 m); Danish
State Railways (DSB) operate 2,101 km (1,999 km rail line
and 102 km rail ferry services); 97 km electrified, 730 km
double tracked; 490 km of standard gage lines are
privately-owned and operated
Highways: approximately 66,482 km total; 64,551 km
concrete, bitumen, or stone block; 1,931 km gravel, crushed
stone, improved earth
Inland waterways: 417 km
Pipelines: refined products, 418 km
Ports: 16 major, 44 minor
Civil air: 71 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased in
and 4 leased out
Airfields: 175 total, 133 usable; 23 with permanent-
surface runways; 9 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 6 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: excellent telephone, telegraph, and
broadcast services; 2.53 million telephones (48.9 per 100
popl.); 6 AM, 13 FM, and 34 TV stations; 14 submarine
coaxial cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,216,000; 1,065,000 fit
for military service; 38,000 reach military age (20) annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $1.140 million; about 15.6% of proposed
central government budget
DJIBOUTI
(formerly French Territory of the Afars
and Issas)
LAND
23,310 km'; 89% desert wasteland, 10%
pasture, and less than 1% cultivated
Land boundaries: 517 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12
Coastline: 314 km (includes offshore islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 180,000 (official estimate for 1972)
Nationality: noun-Afar(s), Issa(s); adjective-Afar, Issa
Ethnic divisions: (approximate figures) 96,300 Somalis,
mostly Issas (large number of the Somalis are temporary
immigrants from Somalia, not citizens of territory), 90,500
Afars, 6,000 Arabs, 7,000 French (inclusive of French
military forces)
Religion: 94% Muslim,
Language: Somali, Afar,
Literacy: about 5%
6% Christian
French, Arabic, all widely used
Labor force: a small number of
port
Organized labor: some 3,000 railway workers organized
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of
Type: republic
Capital: Djibouti
Legal system: based
traditional practices and
Branches: 65-member
prime minister
on French
Islamic law
parliament,
civil law system,
cabinet, president,
Government leader: President, Hassan Gouled
Suffrage: universal
Elections: Parliament elected May 1977
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DJIBOUTI /DOMINICA
Political parties and leaders: National Independence
Union (UNI), Ali Aref Bourhan; African People's Independ-
ence League (LPAI), Hassan Gouled and Ahmed Dini;
Popular Liberation Movement, Kamil Ali; Front for the
Liberation of the Somali Coast (FLCS); governing coalition
consists of the LPAI, the FLCS, and their Afar allies, elected
under the banner of the National Independence Rally (RNI)
Communists: possibly a few sympathizers
Member of: Arab League
ECONOMY
GNP $65 million (1972)
Agriculture: livestock; desert conditions limit commercial
crops to about 15 acres, including fruits and vegetables
Industry: ship repairs and services of port and railroad
drastically reduced with war in Ethiopia's Ogaden that cut
the railroad line
Electric power: 23,500 kW capacity (1977); 55 million
kWh produced (1977), 310 kWh per capita
Imports: $74 million (1973); almost all domestically
needed goods-foods, machinery, transport equipment
es
Exports: $20 million, including transit trade (1973);
and skins, and transit of coffee; since railroad line has been
cut, values have plummeted
Monetary conversion rate: 182 Djibouti francs=US$1
Fiscal year: probably same as that for France (calendar
year)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 97 km meter gage (1.00 M)
Highways: 750 km total; 100 km paved, 650 km
improved earth
Ports: 1 major (Djibouti)
Airfields: 7 total, 7 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: fair system of urban facilities in
Djibouti and radiocommunication stations at outlying places;
3,600 telephones (2.0 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, no FM, and 1 TV
station
DEFENSE FORCES bout
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 30,000; about
17,000 fit for military service
Defense is responsibility of France
DOMINICA
LAND
790 km2; 24% arable, 2% pasture, 67% forests, 7% other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 148 km
VNEUE1
PEOPLE
Population: 81,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.6% (4-60 to 4-70)
Nationality: noun-Dominican(s); adjective-Dominican
Ethnic divisions: mostly of African Negro descent
Religion: Roman Catholic, Church of England, Methodist
Language: English; French patois
Literacy: about 80%
Labor force: 23,000; about 50% in agriculture
Organized labor: 25% of the labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Dominica
Type: dependent territory with full internal autonomy as
a British "Associated State;" may become independent in
February 1978
Capital: Roseau
Political subdivisions: 10 parishes
Legal system: based on English common law; three local
magistrate courts and the British Caribbean* Court of
Appeals
Branches: legislature, 11 member popularly elected
House of Assembly; executive, cabinet headed by Premier
Government leaders: Premier Patrick Roland John; U.K.
Governor Sir Louis Cools-Lartigue
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage over age 18
Elections: every 5 years; most recent March 1975
Political parties and leaders: Dominica Labor Piss
(DLP), Patrick John; Dominica Freedom Party (DFP),
M. Eugenia Charles (unofficial)
Voting strength: House of Assembly seats-DFP 3 seats,
DLP 16 seats, independent 2 seats
Communists: negligible
Member of. CARICOM
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DOMINICAN Atlantic
DOMINICA
Caribbean Sea 0 o
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DOMINICA/DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
ECONOMY
GDP: $21.0 million (1971 est.), $270 per capita; 8.8%
increase in 1971, including price changes
Agricultural products: bananas, citrus, coconuts, cocoa
Major industries: agricultural processing, tourism
Electric power: 10,000 kW capacity (1977); 7 million
kWh produced (1977), 260 kWh per capita
Exports: $12 million (f.o.b., 1975); bananas, lime juice and
oil, cocoa, reexports
Imports: $22 million (c.i.f., 1975); machinery and
equipment, foodstuffs, manufactured articles, cement
Major trade partners: 47% U.K., 15% Commonwealth
Caribbean countries, 7% U.S., 6% Canada (1975)
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dol-
lars= US$1 (May 1975), now floating with pound sterling
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 750 km total; 500 km paved, 250 km gravel
and earth
Ports: 2 minor (Roseau, Portsmouth)
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft, leased in
Airfields: 1 with asphalt runway 1,472 m
Telecommunications: 3,600 telephones in fully automatic
network,(4.8 per 100 popl.); VHF and UHF link to St. Lucia;
I AM and I TV station
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
g
Atlantic
Ocean
DOMINICAN
PUBLIC
Santa
Domingo PUERTO
UERT
RICO
VENEZUELA
LAND
48,692 kmz; 14% cultivated, 4% fallow, 17% meadows and
pastures, 45% forested, 20% built-on or waste
Land boundaries: 361 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 rim (fishing 200
rim); 200 rim exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 1,288 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,393,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Dominican(s); adjective-Dominican
Ethnic divisions: 73% mulatto, 16% white, 11% Negro
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 68%
Labor force: 1.3 million; 73% agriculture, 8% industry,
19% services and other
Organized labor: 12% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Dominican
Type: republic
Capital: Santo Domingo
Political subdivisions: 26 provinces and the National
District
Legal system: based on French civil codes; 1966
constitution
National holiday: Independence Day, 27 February
Branches: President popularly elected for a 4-year term;
bicameral legislature consisting of Senate (27 seats) and
Chamber of Deputies (91 seats) elected for 4-year terms;
Supreme Court
Government leader: President Joaquin Balaguer
Suffrage: universal and compulsory
o
,
ver age 18 or
married, except members of the armed forces and police,
who cannot vote
Elections: national, last election May 1974, next election
May 1978
Political parties and leaders: Reformist Party (PR),
Joaquin Balaguer; Dominican Revolutionary Party (PRD),
Francisco Pena Gomez, Dominican Liberation Party (PLD),
Juan Bosch; Democratic Quisqueyan Party (POD), Elias
Wessin y Wessin; Revolutionary Social Christian Party
(PRSC), Rogelio Delgado Bogaert; Movement for National
Conciliation (MNC), Jaime Manuel Fernandez Gonzalez;
Anti-reelection Movement of Democratic Integration
(MIDA), Francisco Augusto Lora; National Civic Union
(UCN), Guillermo Delmonte Urraca; National Salvation
Movement (MSN), Luis Julian Perez; Popular Democratic
Party (PDP), Homero Lajara Burgos; Fourteenth of June
Revolutionary Movement (MR-1J4), split into several fac-
tions, illegal; Dominican Communist Party (PCD), central
committee, legalized in 1978; Dominican Popular Move-
ment (MPD), illegal; 12th of January National Liberation
Movement (ML-12E), Plinio Matos Moquete, illegal; Com-
munist Party of the Dominican Republic (PACOREDO),
Luis Montas Gonzalez, illegal; Popular Socialist Party (PSP),
illegal
Voting strength (1974 election): 85% PR, 15% PDP, all
other parties abstained
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC/ECUADOR
Communists: an estimated 1,500 to 1,800 members in six
different factions; effectiveness limited by ideological
differences and organizational inadequacies
Member of: FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, 11313, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
IOOC, ISO, ITU, OAS, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $4.4 billion (preliminary 1977), $870 per capita;
real growth rate 1977, 3.3%
Agriculture: main crops-sugarcane, coffee, cocoa, to-
bacco, rice, corn; imports rice; caloric intake, 2,200 calories
per day per capita (1966)
Major industries: sugar processing, nickel mining, bauxite
mining, gold mining, textiles, cement
Electric power: 662,000 kW capacity (1977); 2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 400 kWh per capita
Exports: $780 million (f.o.b., preliminary 1977); sugar,
nickel, coffee, tobacco, cocoa, bauxite
Imports: $848 million (f.o.b., prelim. 1977); foodstuffs,
petroleum, industrial raw materials, capital equipment
Major trade partners: exports-81% U.S. (1977); im-
ports-50% U.S. (1977)
Aid: economic-U.S. authorizations (FY46-76), $250
million in grants, $278 million in loans; from international
organizations (FY46-76), $310 million; military-assistance
from U.S. (FY53-76), $40 million, mostly grant
Budget: revenues, $584 million; expenditures, $555
million (1976)
Monetary conversion rate: 1 peso=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,600 km total; 104 km government-owned
common-carrier 1.065-meter gage; 1,496 km privately
owned plantation lines of 4 different gages ranging from
0.60 m to 1.43 m, 0.760-meter gage predominating
Highways: 11,400 km total; 5,800 km paved, 5,600 km
gravel and improved earth
Pipelines: refined products, 69 km
Ports: 5 major (Santo Domingo, Barahona, Haina, Las
Calderas, San Pedro de Macoris), 17 minor
Civil air: 15 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 52 total, 45 usable; 11 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 9 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: relatively efficient domestic system
based on islandwide radio relay network; 127,000 telephones
(2.6 per 100 popl.); 135 AM, 31 FM, and 11 TV stations; 1
coaxial submarine cable; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,135,000; 718,000 fit
for military service; 52,000 reach military age (18) annually
ECUADOR
LAND
274,540 kmz (including Galapagos Islands); 11% culti-
vated, 8% meadows and pastures, 55% forested, 26% waste,
urban, or other (excludes the Oriente and the Galapagos
Islands, for which information is not available)
Land boundaries: 1,931 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 2,237 km (includes Galapagos Is.)
PEOPLE
Population: 7,549,000, excluding nomadic Indian tribes,
(July 1978), average annual growth rate 3.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Ecuadorean(s); adjective-Ecuador-
ean
Ethnic divisions: 40% mestizo, 40% Indian, 10% white,
5% Negro, 5% Oriental and other
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic (majority nonpracticing)
Language: Spanish, Quechua
Literacy: 57%
Labor force: 2 millioi, of which 56% agriculture, 13%
manufacturing, 4% construction, 7% commerce, 4% public
administration, 16% other services and activities
Organized labor: less than 15% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Ecuador
National holiday: Independence Day, 10 August
Type: republic; under military regime since 1972
Capital: Quito
Political subdivisions: 20 provinces including Galapagos
Islands
Legal system: based on civil law system; progressive new
constitution passed in January, 1978 referendum will come
into effect following the inauguration of a new civilian
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president before the end of 1978; legal education at 4 state
and 2 private universities; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 10 August
Branches: Supreme Council of Government, made up of
the three military chiefs, assumed power January 1976;
judiciary system supervised by Supreme Court; six special
tribunals established in July 1972
Government leader: President of Supreme Council Vice
Admiral Alfredo Poveda Burbano
Suffrage: universal for literates over age 18
Elections: presidential and municipal elections to he held
16 July 1978; will be followed by parliamentary elections
approximately nine months later
Political parties and leaders: Conservative Party, Sixto
Antonio Durvan-Ballen, center right; Radical Liberal Party,
Francisco Huerta Montalvo, center left; Concentration of
Popular Forces, Assad Bucaram, Jaime Roldos, populist;
Christian Democrats, Osvaldo Hurtado, center left; Demo-
cratic Left, Rodrigo Borja, center left; National Velasquistas
Front, Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra, personalistic
Voting strength: in June 1968 national elections, Velas-
quistas, a center-left coalition, and a rightist coalition each
got approximately one-third
Communists: Communist Party of Ecuador (PCE, pro-
Moscow, Pedro Saad-secretary-general) 500 members plus
an estimated 3,000 sympathizers; Communist Party of
Ecuador (PCE/ML, pro-Peking), 100 members; Revolution-
ary Socialist Party of Ecuador (PSRE), 200 members
Member of: ECOSOC, FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU,
LAFTA and Andean Sub-Regional Group (formed in May
1969 within LAFTA), OAS, OPEC, SELA, U.N., UNESCO,
UPEB, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $5.7 billion (est. 1977), $795 per capita; 67% private
consumption, 10% public consumption, 23% gross invest-
ment; average annual real growth rate 1974-77, 9.6%
Agriculture: main crops-bananas, coffee, cocoa, sugar-
cane, cotton, corn, potatoes, rice; caloric intake, 1,970
calories per day per capita (1970)
Fishing: catch 233,400 metric tons (1975); exports $65
million (1977), imports negligible
Major industries: food processing, textiles, chemicals,
fishing, petroleum
Electric power: 552,000 kW capacity (1977); 2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 260 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.4 billion (f.o.b., 1977); petroleum, bananas,
coffee, cocoa, sugar, fish products
Imports: $1.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977); agricultural and
industrial machinery, wheat, petroleum products, chemical
products, transportation and communication equipment
Major trade partners: exports (1976)-41% U.S., 20%
LAFTA, 10% EC; imports (1976)-40% U.S., 20% EC, 13%
LAFTA
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-75), $155
million loans, $138 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $439 million; from Communist
countries (1967-76), $19.4 million loans; military-assistance
from U.S. (FY49-76), $81 million
Budget: (1977) revenues, $850 million; expenditures, $970
million
Monetary conversion rate: 25 sucres=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,121 km total; 966 km 1.067-meter gage, 155
km 0.750-meter gage; all single track
Highways: 22,250 km total; 3,300 km paved, 11,300 kin
otherwise improved, 7,650 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 1,500 km
Pipelines: crude oil, 623 km; refined products, 1,358 km
Ports: 3 major (Guayaquil, Manta, Puerto Bolivar), 11
minor
Civil air: 27 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased in
Airfields: 173 total, 173 usable; 16 with permanent-
surface runways; 5 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 22 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 3 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: facilities adequate only in largest
cities; I Atlantic Ocean satellite station; 174,000 telephones
(2.5 per 100 popl.); 250 AM, 38 FM, and 10 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,692,000; 1,103,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually 78,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $114.2 million; about 17.5% of central government
budget
LAND
1,000,258 km2 (including 57,498 km2 occupied by Israel);
2.8% cultivated (of which about 70% multiple cropped);
96.5% desert, waste, or urban; 0.7% inland water
Land boundaries: 2,527 km (1967); approximately 2,580
km including border of occupied Sinai area (since September
1975)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
Coastline: 2,450 km (1967); includes approximately 500
km within occupied Sinai area (since September 1975)
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Elections: elections to People's Assembly every 5 years
(most recent October 1976); presidential elections every 6
years (most recent September 1976)
Political parties and leaders: formation of political
parties must be approved by government-controlled Arab
Socialist Union (ASU)
Communists: approximately 500, party members
Member of: AAPSO, AFDB, Arab League, FAO, G-77,
GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council, NAM, OAPEC, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO, WPC, WSG
PEOPLE
Population: 39,890,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Egyptian(s); adjective-Egyptian or
Arab Republic of Egypt
Ethnic divisions: 90% Eastern Hamitic stock; 10% Greek,
Italian, Syro-Lebanese
Religion: (official estimate) 94% Muslim, 6% Copt and
other
Language: Arabic official, English and French widely
understood by educated classes
Literacy: around 40%
Labor force: 8 to 12 million; 45% to 50% agriculture, 10%
industry, 10% trade and finance, 30% services and other;
shortage of skilled labor
Organized labor: 1 to 3 million
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Arab Republic of Egypt
Type: republic; under presidential rule since June 1956
Capital: Cairo
Political subdivisions: 25 governorates
Legal system: based on English common law, Islamic law,
and Napoleonic codes; permanent constitution written in
1971; judicial review of limited nature in Supreme Court,
also in Council of State which oversees validity of
administrative decisions; legal education at Cairo University;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: National Day, 23 July
Branches: executive power vested in President, who
appoints cabinet; People's Assembly gradually gaining power
as political liberalization program is implemented; indepen-
dent judiciary administered by Minister of Justice
Government leader: President Anwar Sadat
Suffrage: universal over age 18
ECONOMY
GNP: $14 billion (1976 est.), in current prices, $370 per
capita; average annual growth rate of 6%-7% since 1974
Agriculture: main cash crop-cotton; other crops-rice,
onions, beans, citrus fruit, wheat, corn, barley; not self-suffi-
cient in food, but agriculture a net earner of foreign
exchange
Major industries: textiles, food processing, chemicals,
petroleum, construction, cement
Electric power: 4,400,000 kW capacity (1977); 12 billion
kWh produced (1977), 300 kWh per capita
Monetary conversion rate: official rate-1 Egyptian
pound=US$2.54 (selling rate); 0.394 Egyptian pound=
US$1 (selling rate); parallel market rate-1 Egyptian
pound=US$1.43, 0.699 Egyptian pound=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year, beginning in 1973
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 5,405 km total; 951 km double track; 25 km
electrified; 4,858 km standard gage (1.435 m), 200 km meter
gage (1.00 m), 347 km 0.750-meter gage
Highways: 47,275 km total; 12,650 km paved, 2,500 km
gravel and crushed stone, 14,100 km improved earth, 18,025
km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 3,360 km; Suez Canal, 160 km long,
used by ocean-going vessels drawing up to 11.5 meters of
water; Alexandria-Cairo waterway navigable by barges of
metric ton capacity; Nile and large canals by barges of
420-metric ton capacity; Ismailia Canal by barges of 200- to
300-metric ton capacity; secondary canals by sailing craft of
10- to 70-metric ton capacity
Freight carried: Suez Canal (1966)-242 million metric
tons of which 175.6 million metric tons were POL
Pipelines: crude oil, 675 km; refined products, 240 km;
natural gas, 365 km
Ports: 3 major (Alexandria, Port Said, Suez), 8 minor
Civil air: 27 major transport aircraft, including 4 leased in
and 2 leased out
Airfields: 100 total, 81 usable; 66 with permanent-surface
runways; 43 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 1 with runway
over 3,660 in, 21 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane
station
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Telecommunications: second-largest system in Africa but
inadequate for needs and poorly maintained; principal
centers Alexandria and Cairo, secondary centers Al Man-
surah, Ismailia, and Tanta; intercity connections by coaxial
cable and microwave; extensive upgrading in progress;
500,000 telephones (1.3 per 100 popl.); 22 AM, no FM, and
29 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station; Symphonic
satellite station; 2 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 8,592,000; 5,603,000 fit
for military service; about 384,000 reach military age (20)
annually
LAND
21,400 km2; 32% cropland (9% corn, 5% cotton, 7% coffee,
11% other), 26% meadows and pastures, 31% nonagricul-
tural, 11% forested
Land boundaries: 515 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 307 km
PEOPLE
Population: 4,515,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Salvadoran(s); adjective-Salvadoran
Ethnic divisions: 84%-88% mestizo; Indian and white
minorities, 6%-8% each
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic, probably
97%-98%
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 50% literacy in urban areas, 30% in rural areas
Labor force: 1,500,000 (est. 1977); 57% agriculture, 14%
services, 14% manufacturing, 6% commerce, 9% other;
shortage of skilled labor and large pool of unskilled labor,
but manpower training programs improving situation
Organized labor: 5% of total labor force; 10% of
nonagricultural labor force (1977)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of El Salvador
Type: republic
Capital: San Salvador
Political subdivisions: 14 departments
Legal system: based on Spanish law, with traces of
common law; constitution adopted 1962; judicial review of
legislative acts in the Supreme Court; legal education at
University of El Salvador; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdic-
tion, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 15 September
Branches: traditionally dominant executive, unicameral
legislature, Supreme Court
Government leader: President Gen. Carlos Humberto
Romero Mena
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: legislative elections every 2 years; presidential
elections every 5 years; presidential elections 1982, legisla-
tive and municipal elections March 1980
Political parties and leaders: National Conciliation Party
(PCN), President Arturo A. Molina, and replaced by Carlos
Humberto Romero on 1 July; Christian Democratic Party
(PDC), Juan Ramirez Rauda, Dr. Pablo Mauricio Alvergue,
Jose Napoleon Duarte; Salvadoran Popular Party (PPS),
Benjamin Wilfredo Navarrete, Roberto Quinonez Meza, Dr.
Jose Antonio Guzman; Communist Party of El Salvador
(PCES), illegal, Jorge Shafick Handal; National Revolution-
ary Movement (MNR), Dr. Guillermo Manuel Ungo;
National Democratic Union Party (PUDN), Communist
Front, Jorge Shafick Handal, Francisco Roberto Lima, Julio
Ernesto Contreras, Julio Castro Belloso; Independent Demo-
cratic United Front (FUDI), Gen. Jose A. Medrano, Raul
Salaverria
Voting strength: February 1977 presidential election-
PCN 66%, PDC, PUDN, and MNR coalition, 34%; March
1978 legislative election-PCN, 50 seats; PPS, 4 seats; all
other opposition parties boycotted the election
Communists: 220 to 225 active members; sympathizers,
5,000
Other political or pressure groups: the military; about
100 prominent families; General Confederation of Trade
Unions (CGS); Unifying Federation of Salvadoran Trade
Unions (FUSS), Communist dominated; Federation of
Construction and Transport Workers Unions (FESINCONS-
TRANS), independent; Catholic Church; Salvadoran Na-
tional Association of Educators (ANDES); National Associ-
ation of Private Enterprise (ANEP); National Democratic
Organization (ORDEN)
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EL SALVADOR/EQUATORIAL GUINEA
Member of: Central American Common Market (CACM),
FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, 11313,
IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
OAS, ODECA, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $2.2 billion (1976), $510 per capita; 71% private
consumption, 12% government consumption, 20% domestic
investment; -3% net foreign balance and draw-down of
stocks, real growth rate, 4.7% (1976)
Agriculture: main crops-coffee, cotton, corn, sugar, rice,
beans; caloric intake, 2,000 calories per day per capita
(1963-64)
Fishing: catch 10,550 metric tons (1975); exports $6.0
million (1971), imports $0.8 million (1974)
Major industries: food processing, textiles, clothing,
petroleum products
Electric power: 557,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 295 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,021 million (f.o.b., 1977); coffee, cotton, sugar
Imports: $941 million (c.i.f., 1977); machinery, auto-
motive vehicles, petroleum, foodstuffs, fertilizer
Major trade partners: exports-33% U.S., 24% CACM,
11% other (1976); imports-29% U.S., 24% CACM, 7%
Venezuela, 14% West Germany, 8% Netherlands, 40% other
(1976)
Aid: economic-from U.S. (FY46-76), $104 million loans,
$82 million grants; from international organizations
(FY46-75),
$287
million;
from other Western countries
(1960-71),
$9.8
million;
military-assistance from U.S.
(FY53-76),
$16
million
Budget: (1978) $500 million
Monetary conversion rate: 2.5 colones=US$l (official)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 600 km 0.914-meter gage, single-tracked;
Highways: 7,250 km total; 1,500 km paved, 1,300 km
gravel 4,400 km improved and unimproved earth
Inland waterways: Lempa River partially navigable
Ports: 2 major (Acajutla, La Union), 1 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 161 total, 153 usable; 5 with permanent-
surfaced runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 10 with
runways 1,220=2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: nationwide trunk radio relay sys-
tem; connection into Central American microwave net;
54,200 telephones (1.3 per 100 popl.); 60 AM, 9 FM, and 5
TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean COMSAT station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 969,000; 594,000 fit for
military service; 46,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $42.2 million; 8.4% of central government budget
EQUATORIAL GUINEA
LAND
27,972 km2; Rio Muni, about 25,900 km2, largely forested;
Fernando Po, about 2,072 km2
Land boundaries: 539 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 296 km
PEOPLE
Population: 336,000 (July 1978), this estimate does not
take into account emigration from Equatorial Guinea during
the last several years, average annual growth rate 1.8% (7-68
to 7-69); Rio Muni, 235,000, average annual growth rate
1.5% (7-68 to 7-69); Fernando Po, 101,000, average annual
growth rate 2.6% (7-68 to 7-69)
Nationality: noun-Equatorial Guinean(s); adjective-
Equatorial Guinean
Ethnic divisions: indigenous population of Province
Francisco Macias Nguema primarily Bubi, some Fernan-
dinos; of Rio Muni primarily Fang; less than 1,000
Europeans, primarily Spanish
Religion: natives all nominally Christian and predomi-
nantly Roman Catholic; some pagan practices retained
Language: Spanish official language of government and
business; also pidgin English, Fang
Literacy: 12% (est.)
Labor force: most Equatorial Guineans involved in
subsistence agriculture
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Equatorial Guinea
Type: republic, one-party presidential regime since 1968
Capital: Malabo, Province Francisco Macias Nguema
Political subdivisions: 2 provinces (Province Francisco
Macias Nguema and Rio Muni)
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Legal system: based on Spanish Civil law system and
customary law, new constitution adopted August 1973; has
not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 5 March
Branches: there are legislative and judicial branches but
President exercises virtually unlimited power
Government leader: President for life, Francisco Macias
Nguema
Suffrage: universal age 21 and over
Elections: parliamentary elections held December 1973
Political parties and leaders: National Unity Party of
Workers (PUNT) is the sole legal party, led by President
Macias
Communists: no significant number of Communists or
sympathizers
Member of: Conference of East and Central African
States, ECA, G-77, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IMCO, IMF, ITU,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UPU
ECONOMY
GNP: $70 million (1972); $240 per capita
Agriculture: major cash crops-Rio Muni, timber, coffee;
Fernando Po, cocoa; main food products-rice, yams,
cassava, bananas, oil palm nuts, manioc, and livestock
Fishing: catch 4,000 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: fishing, sawmilling
Electric power: 5,000 kW capacity (1977); 17 million
kWh produced (1977), 50 kWh per capita
Exports: $19 million (1973); cocoa, coffee, and wood
Imports: $21 million (1973); foodstuffs, chemicals and
chemical products, textiles
Major trade partner: Spain
Aid: Spain, $14.0 million (1969); Libya, $1 million (1971);
China $24 million (Economic) extended (1971)
Budget: (1973) receipts $9 million, expenditures $12
million
Monetary conversion rate: 64.47 Guinean pesetas=US$1
(official)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: Rio Muni-2,460 km, including approx. 185
km bituminous, remainder gravel and earth; Fernando Po-
300 km, including 146 km bituminous, remainder gravel and
earth
Inland waterways: Rio Muni has approximately 167 km
of year-round navigable waterway, used mostly by pirogues
Ports: 2 major (Macias Nguema Biyogo, Rey Malabo), 3
minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft (leased in)
Airfields: 5 total, 3 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: fairly adequate for the size and
stage of development of the country; international commu-
nications by radio from Bata and Malabo to Cameroon,
Nigeria, and Spain; 1,700 telephones (0.5 per 100 pop].); 2
AM stations, no FM stations, and 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 77,000; 38,000 fit for
military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1970, $3,475,700; 14.3% of central government budget
ETHIOPIA
LAND
1,178,450 km2; 10% cropland and orchards, 55% meadows
and natural pastures, 6% forests and woodlands, 29%
wasteland, built-on areas, and other
Land boundaries: 5,198 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm; sedentary
fisheries extends to limit of fisheries
Coastline: 1,094 km (includes offshore islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 29,679,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.6% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Ethiopian(s); adjective-Ethiopian
Ethnic divisions: Galla 40%, Amhara and Tigrai 32%,
Sidamo 9%, Shankella 6%, Somali 6%, Afar 4%, Gurage 2%,
other 1%
Religion: 35%-40% Ethiopian Orthodox, 40%-45% Mus-
lims, 15%-20% animist, 5% other
Language: Amharic official; many local languages and
dialects; English major foreign language taught in schools
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Literacy: about 5%
Labor force: 90% agriculture and animal husbandry; 10%
government, military, and quasi-government
Organized labor: All Ethiopian Trade Union formed
January 1977 to represent 273,000 registered trade union
members
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Ethiopia
Type: under military rule since mid-1974; monarchy
abolished in March 1975, but republic not yet declared
Capital: Addis Ababa
Political subdivisions: 14 provinces (also referred to as
regional administrations)
Legal system: complex structure with civil, Islamic,
common and customary law influences; constitution sus-
pended September 1974; military leaders have promised a
new constitution but established no time frame for its
adoption; legal education at Addis Ababa University; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Popular Revolution Commemoration
Day, 12 September
Branches: effective power exercised by Provisional
Military Administrative Council (PMAC), a group estimated
at 40-100 officers and enlisted men which operates on
committee system; predominantly civilian cabinet is ineffec-
tual and holds office at suffrance of military; legislature
dissolved September 1974; judiciary at higher levels based on
Western pattern, at lower levels on traditional pattern,
without jury system in either
Government leader: Lieutenant Colonel Mengistu Haile-
Mariam, Chairman of the Provisional Military Administra-
tive Council
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: union dwellers' association officials elected
October-December 1976
Political parties and leaders: Common front of Ethiopian
Marxist-Leninist organizations, encompassing five quasi-
official groups-All-Ethiopian Socialist Movement (Me'I
Sone), Revolutionary Flame (Seded), and three less impor-
tant ones
Communists: Ethiopian Communist Party is a small
group opposed to military government
Other political or pressure groups: important dissident
groups include Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF), Eritrean
People's Liberation Front (EPLF), and Eritrean Liberation
Front/Popular Liberation Forces in Eritrea; Ethiopian
People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), a radical left under-
ground movement concentrated in Addis Ababa and made
up predominantly of students and intellectuals; it has been
severely reduced by a recent government eradication
campaign; and Ethiopian Democratic Union (EDU), primar
ily an exile group, although it has made some inroads inside
Ethiopia; several other dissident groups with ethnic or
provincial bases of support
Member of: AFDB, ECA, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $2,650 million (1975), $90 per capita; average
annual real growth rate 4% (1967-73), zero (1974 and in
1975)
Agriculture: main crops-coffee, teff, durra, barley,
wheat, corn, sugarcane, cotton, pulses, oilseeds; livestock
Major industries: cement, sugar refining, cotton textiles,
food processing, oil refinery
Electric power: 297,000 kW capacity (1977); 500 million
kWh produced (1977), 20 kWh per capita
Exports: $283 million (f.o.b., 1976); coffee 55%, oilseeds
15%, pulses 10%, hides and skins 9%; $12.6 million to
Communist countries (1976)
Imports: $360 million (c.i.f., 1976); machinery and
transportation equipment (34%), basic manufactures (25%),
fuels (15%); in 1977 military material bulks large; $17.9
million from Communist countries
Major trade partners: imports-Saudi Arabia, Japan,
Italy, West Germany, Iran, U.K., France, and U.S.;
exports-U.S., Djibouti, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Italy, West
Germany
Monetary conversion rate: 2.085 Ethiopian Birr=US$1
Fiscal year: 8 July-7 July
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,014 km total; 676 km meter gage (1.00 m), 32
km 1.067-meter gage, 306 km 0.95-meter gage; all single
track
Highways: 10,895 km total; 3,229 km bituminous, 7,666
km crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized earth, remainder
earth
Inland waterways: 41 navigation possible on Lake Tana
and on approx. 225 km of unconnected and basically
unimproved waterways, of which only 114 km are navigable
year round
Ports: 2 major (Assab, Massawa)
Civil air: 20 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 190 total, 176 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 6 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 49 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: system composed of open-wire
lines, radiocommunication stations, and small number of
multiconductor cable and radio-relay links; principal center
Addis Ababa, secondary center Asmara; 73,000 telephones
(0.3 per 100 popl.); 4 AM stations, no FM stations, and 1 TV
station
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DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 7,366,000; 3,920,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually 301,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 6 July 1977,
$104,445,000; 14.7% of central government budget
FALKLAND ISLANDS
(Islas Malvinas)'
CHILE
ARGENTINA
FALKLAND
,,~ ISLANDS
LAND
Colony-12,168 km2; area consists of some 200 small
islands, chief of which are East Falkland (6,680 km2) and
West Falkland (5,276 km2); dependencies-consists of the
South Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, and the Shag and
Clerke Rocks
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 1,288 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,000 (official estimate for 31 December
1977)
.Nationality: noun-Falkland Islander(s); adjective-Falk-
land island
Ethnic divisions: almost totally British
Religion: Predominantly Church of England
Language: English
Literacy: compulsory education up to age 14
Labor force: 1,100 (est.); est. over 95% in agriculture,
mostly sheepherding
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Colony of the Falkland Islands
Type: British crown colony
Capital: Stanley
' The Possession of the Falkland Islands has been disputed by the
U.K. and Argentina (which refers to them as the Islas Malvinas)
since 1833.
Political subdivisions: local government is
capital
Legal system: English common law
Branches: Governor, Executive Council, Legislative
Council
Government leader: Governor and Commander in Chief
Ernest G. Lewis (also High Commissioner for British
Antarctic Colony)
Suffrage: universal
ECONOMY
Government budget: Colony-revenues, $1.0 million
(FY68); expenditures, $1.1 million (FY68)
Agriculture: Colony-predominantly sheep farming, de-
pendencies-whaling and sealing
Major industries: Colony-wool processing; depend-
encies-whale and seal processing
Electric power: 1,250 kW capacity (1977); 2.5 million
kWh produced (1977), 1,150 kWh per capita
Exports: Colony-$2.28 million (1969); wool, hides and
skins, and other; dependencies-no exports in 1968 or 1969
Imports: Colony-$1.22 million (1969); food, clothing,
fuels, and machinery; dependencies-$8,368 (1969); mineral
fuels and lubricants, food, and machinery
Major trade partners: nearly all exports to the U.K., also
some to the Netherlands and to Japan; imports from
Curacao, Japan, and the U.K.
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Falkland island
pound = US$2.60
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 35 km total; 16 km paved, 19 km gravel, and
earth; no other made-up roads in the islands beyond the
immediate vicinity of Stanley
Ports: 1 major (Port Stanley), 4 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1 usable airfield, 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: government-operated and radio-
telephone networks providing effective service to almost all
points on both islands; approximately 650 telephones (est. 30
per 100 popl.); 1 AM station
FAROE ISLANDS
LAND
1,340 km2; less than 5% arable, of which only a fraction
cultivated; archipelago consisting of 18 inhabited islands and
a few uninhabited islets
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FAROS
ISLANDS
Atlantic
Ocean
Norwegian
Sea
North
Sea
ISLANDS /FIJI
Political parties and leaders: Peoples, Hakun Djurhuus;
Republican, Erlendur Patursson; Home Rule, Samuel
Petersen; Progressive, Kjartan Mohr; Social Democratic, Atli
Dam; Union, Kristian Djurhuus
Voting strength (1975 election): Social Democratic 25.8%,
Republican 22.5%, Peoples 20.5%, Union 19.1%, Home Rule
7.2%, Progressive 2.5%
Communists: insignificant number
Member of: Nordic Council
NITED
p UDM
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm; fishing
200 nm
Coastline: 764 km
PEOPLE
Population: 42,000 (July
rate 1.4% (1-75 to 1-77)
1978), average annual
Nationality: noun-Faroese
Faroese
(sing., pl.);
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous
ion: Evangelical Lutheran
li
R
g
e
Languages: Faroese (derived from Old Norse), Danish
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 15,000; largely engaged in fishing, manufac-
turing, transportation, and commerce
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Faroe Islands
Type: self-governing province within the Kingdom
Denmark; 2 representatives in Danish parliament
Capital: Torshavn on the island of Streymoy
Political subdivisions: 7 districts, 49 communes, 1 town
Legal system: based on Danish law; Home Rule Act
enacted 1948
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with Crown,
acting through appointed High Commissioner, and provin-
cial parliament (Lagting) in matters of strictly Faroese
concern; executive power vested in Crown, acting through
High Commissioner, but exercised by provincial cabinet
responsible to provincial parliament
Government leaders: Queen Margrethe II; Prime
ter, Atli Dam; Danish Governor, Leif Groth
Suffrage: universal, but not compulsory, over
Elections: held every 4 years;
(coincides with Danish elections)
ECONOMY
GDP: $173.4 million (1974), about $3,650 per capita
Agriculture: sheep and cattle grazing
Fishing: catch 285,100 metric tons (1975); exports, $77.4
million (1975)
Major industry: fishing
Electric power: 28,500 kW capacity (1977); 90 million
kWh produced (1977), 2,150 kWh per capita
Exports: $80.7 million (f.o.b., 1975); mostly fish and fish
products
Imports: $113.3 million (c.i.f., 1975); machinery and
transport equipment, petroleum and petroleum products,
food products
Major trade partners: 46.6% Denmark, 12.3% Norway,
8.0% U.K., 6.2% U.S. (1975)
Budget: (FY76) expenditures $52.8 million, revenues
$52.8 million
Monetary conversion rate: 6.0031 Danish Kroner=US$l
(1977, average)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 .March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: none
Ports: 1 minor
Airfields: 1 with permanent-surface runway, less than
1,220 m
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: good international communica-
tions; fair domestic facilities; 15,000 telephones (35 per 100
popl.); 1 AM, and 3 FM stations; 3 coaxial submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49 included with Denmark
FIJI
LAND
18,272 km'; landownership-83.6% Fijians, 1.7% Indians,
6.4% government, 7.2% European, 1.1% other; about 30% of
land area is suitable for farming
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 1,129 km
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PAPUt
?'"tA Pacific Ocean
PEOPLE
Population: 610,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Fijian(s); adjective-Fijian
Ethnic divisions: 42% Fijian, 50% Indian, 8% European,
Chinese and others
Religion: Fijians mainly Christian, Indians are Hindu
with a Muslim minority
Language: English and Fijian (official), Hindustani
spoken among Indians
Literacy: over 80%
Labor force: 95,000; over 50% in agriculture, no
breakdown on remainder
Organized labor: about 50% of labor force organized into
22 unions; unions organized along lines of work, breakdown
by ethnic origin causes further fragmentation
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Dominion of Fiji
Type: independent state within Commonwealth; Eliza-
beth II recognized as head of state
Capital: Suva
Political subdivisions: 14 provinces
Legal system: based on British
National holiday: 10 October
Branches: executive-Prime Minister; legislative-
52-member House of Representatives; Alliance Party 36
seats, National Federation Party 15 seats; 1 independent
Government leader: Prime Minister Ratu Sir Kamisese
Mara
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: every 5 years unless House dissolves earlier, last
held September 1977
Political parties: Alliance, primarily Fijian, headed by
Ratu Mara; National Federation, primarily Indian, headed
by Jai Ram Reddy
Communists: few, no figures available
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, Commonwealth, FAO,
G-77, GATT (de facto), IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IMF, ISO, ITU,
U.N., UPU, WHO, WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $644 million (1975), $1,130 per capita; 5.8% real
growth rate (1971-75)
Agriculture: main crops-sugar, coconut products, ba-
nanas, rice; major deficiency, grains
Major industries: sugar processing, tourism
Electric power: 90,000 kW capacity (1977); 270 million
kWh produced (1977), 450 kWh per capita
Exports: $144 million (f.o.b., 1976, including reexports);
70% sugar, 11% coconut oil, 9% gold
Imports: $245 million (f.o.b., 1976); 20% manufactured
goods, 19% food, 16% machinery (1974)
Major trade partners: exports-38% U.K., 31 % U.S., 11 %
Australia; imports-30% Australia, 18% Japan, 11% New
Zealand, 4% U.S. (1974)
Aid: disbursed 1968-Australia $1.5 million, U.S. $0.6
million, U.K. $4.2 million
Budget: (FY75) revenues $107 million, expenditures $129
million
Monetary conversion rate: Fijian dollar=US$1.1544
(January 1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 644 km narrow gage (0.610 m); owned by Fiji
Sugar Corp., Ltd.
Highways: 3,205 km total (1976); 307 km paved, 2,676
km gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized soil surface; 222
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 203 km; 122 km navigable by
motorized craft and 200-metric ton barges
Ports: 1 major, 6 minor
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 15 total, 15 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways, 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: modern local, interisland, and
international (wire/radio integrated) public and special-pur-
pose telephone, telegraph, and teleprinter facilities; regional
radio center; important COMPAC cable link between
U.S./Canada and New Zealand/Australia, et al.; 30,700
telephones (5.3 per 100 pop].); 6 AM, 2 FM, and no TV
stations; I ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 153,000; 84,000 fit for
military service; 6,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: the defense of the Fiji Islands was the
responsibility of the U.K. until 10 October 1970; military
budget for 1971, $314,000
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Legal system: civil law system based on Swedish law;
constitution adopted 1919; Supreme Court may request
legislation interpreting or modifying laws; legal education at
Universities of Helsinki and Turku; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 6 December
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with President
and parliament (Eduskunta); executive power vested in
President and exercised through cabinet responsible to
parliament; Supreme Court, 4 superior courts, 193 lower
courts
Government leader: President Urho K. Kekkonen; Prime
Minister Kalevi Sorsa
Suffrage: universal, over age 20; not compulsory
Elections: parliamentary, every 4 years (next in 1979);
presidential, every 6 years (President Kekkonen reelected to
6-year term in January 1978)
Political parties and leaders: Social Democratic, Rafael
Paasio; Center, Johannes Virolainen; Peoples Democratic
League (Communist front), Ele Alenius; Conservative, Harri
Holker; Liberal, Pekka Tarjanne; Swedish Peoples Party,
Kristan Gestrin; Rural, Veikko Vennamo; Finnish People's
Unity Party, Eino Haikala; Communist, Aarne Saarinen
Voting strength (1978 election): 23.3% Social Democratic,
19.5% Center, 18.2% People's Democratic League, 14.7%
Unionist, 8.8% Christian League, 4.7% Finnish Rural Party,
3.6% Swedish Peoples, 3.4% Constitutional Peoples, 2.9%
Liberal Peoples, 0.8% Finnish Peoples Unity Party, 0.1%
Socialist Workers' Party
Communists: 43,000; an additional 65,000 persons belong
to Peoples Democratic League; a further number of
sympathizers, as indicated by 438,757 votes cast for Peoples
Democratic League in 1975 elections
Member of: ADB, CEMA (special cooperation agree-
ment), DAC, EC (free trade agreement), EFTA (associate),
FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IFC,
IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Coun-
cil, Nordic Council, OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WSG
LAND
336,700 km2; 8% arable, 58% forested, 34% other
Land boundaries: 2,534 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 4 nm; fishing 12
nm; Aaland Islands, 3 nm
Coastline: 1,126 km (approx.) excludes islands and coastal
indentations
PEOPLE
Population: 4,748,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.2% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Finn(s); adjective-Finnish
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous white population, small
Lappish minority
Religion: 93% Evangelical Lutheran, 1% Greek Orthodox,
1% other, 5% no affiliation
Language: Finnish 92%, Swedish 7%; small Lapp- and
Russian-speaking minorities
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 2.2 million; 16.6% agriculture, forestry, and
fishing, 26.4% mining and manufacturing, 8.4% construc-
tion, 15.4% commerce, 6.8% transportation and communica-
tions, 4.0% banking and finance, 20.1% services; 6.1%
(136,000) unemployed 1977 annual coverage
Organized labor: 60% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Finland
Type: republic
Capital: Helsinki
Political subdivisions: 12 provinces; 443 communes, 78
towns
ECONOMY
GNP: $27 billion (1977), $5,689 per capita; 51.6%
consumption, 26.0% investment, 19.9% government; -2%
net exports of goods and services; 1976 growth rate -0.6%,
constant prices
Agriculture: animal husbandry, especially dairying, pre-
dominates; forestry important secondary occupation for
rural population; main crops-cereals, sugar beets, potatoes;
85% self-sufficient; shortages-food and fodder grains;
caloric intake 2,940 calories per day per capita (1970-71)
Major industries: include metal manufacturing and
shipbuilding, forestry and wood processing (pulp, paper),
copper refining
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Shortages: fossil fuels; industrial raw materials, except
wood, and iron ore
Crude steel: 1.7 million metric tons produced (1976), 358
kg per capita
Electric power: 8,703,000 kW capacity (1977); 31.9
billion kWh produced (1977), 6,735 kWh per capita
Exports: $7.5 billion (f.o.b., 1977); timber, paper and
pulp, ships, machinery, iron and steel, clothing and footwear
Imports: $7.5 billion (c.i.f., 1977); foodstuffs, petroleum
and petroleum products, chemicals, transport equipment,
iron and steel, machinery, textile yarn and fabrics
Major trade partners: (1976) 37% EC-nine (13% West
Germany, 11% U.K.); 19% U.S.S.R., 16% Sweden; 5% U.S.
Aid: economic authorizations-U.S. $64 million (FY70-76)
Budget: (1976) expenditures $8.4 billion, revenues $7.8
billion
Monetary conversion rate: new markka (Fmk)
4.03=US$1 (1976 trade conversion factor, IMF)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 6,038 km total; Finnish State Railways (VR)
operate a total 6,010 km 1.524-meter gage, 477 km multiple
track, and 395 km electrified; 22 km 0.750-meter gage and 6
km 1.524-meter gage are privately owned
Highways: about 73,552 km total in national classified net
work, including 31,000 km paved (bituminous, concrete,
bituminous surface treated) and 42,552 km unpaved
(stabilized gravel, gravel, earth); additional 29,440 km of
private (state subsidized) roads
Inland waterways: 6,597 km total (including Saimaa
Canal); 3,700 km suitable for steamers; Saimaa Canal locks
(84 in by 13.2 in with a 5.2 m depth over sill) can
accommodate vessels of up to 82 in in length, 11.8 m beam,
4.4 m draft, and 24.5 in mast height
Pipelines: natural gas, 161 km
Ports: 11 major, 14 minor
Civil air: 40 major transport aircraft, including 2 leased
out
Airfields: 112 total, 111 usable; 36 with permanent-
surface runways; 17 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 24 with
runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: good telecom service from cable
and radio-relay network; 1.94 million telephones (40.9 per
100 popl.); 15 AM, 40 FM, and 76 TV stations; 4 submarine
cables, including I coaxial
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,217,000; 974,000 fit
for military service; 39,000 reach military age (17) annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $514.8 million; about 5.5% of central
government budget
LAND
551,670 km'; 35% cultivated, 26% meadows and pastures,
14% waste, urban, or other, 25% forested
Land boundaries: 2,888 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 3,427 km (includes Corsica, 644 km)
PEOPLE
Population: 53,446,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 0.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Frenchman (men); adjective-
French
Ethnic divisions: 45% Celtic; remainder Latin, Germanic,
Slav, Basque
Religion: 83% Catholic, 2% Protestant, 1% Jewish, 1%
Muslim (North African workers), 13% unaffiliated
Language: French (100% of population); rapidly declin-
ing regional patois-Provencal, Breton, Germanic, Corsican,
Catalan, Basque, Flemish
Literacy: 97%
Labor force: 22 million (est. in mid-1976); 47% services,
38% industry, 11% agriculture, 4% unemployed
Organized labor: approximately 17% of labor force, 23%
of salaried labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: French
Type: republic, with
Capital: Paris
Republic
president
Political subdivisions: 96 metropolitan departments, 21
regional economic districts
Legal system: civil law system with indigenous concepts;
new constitution adopted 1958, amended concerning elec-
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tion of President in 1962; judicial review of administrative
but not legislative acts; legal education at over 25 schools of
law
National holiday: National Day, 14 July
Branches: presidentially appointed Prime Minister heads
Council of Ministers, which is formally responsible to
National Assembly; bicameral legislature-National Assem-
bly (491 members), Senate (295 members) restricted to a
delaying action; judiciary independent in principle
Government leader: President Valery Giscard d'Estaing
Suffrage: universal over age 18; not compulsory
Elections: National Assembly-every 5 years, last election
March 1978, direct universal suffrage, 2 ballots; Senate-
indirect collegiate system for 9 years, renewable by
one-third every 3 years, last election September 1977;
President, direct, universal suffrage every 7 years, 2 ballots,
last election May 1974
Political parties and leaders: Majority Coalition-Rally
for the Republic (RPR, formerly UDR), Jacques Chirac;
Republicans (PR), Jacques Blanc; Center for Social Demo-
crats (CDS), Jean Lecanuet; Radical Socialist (RS), Jean-
Jacques Servan-Schreiber; Union for French Democracy
(federation of PR, CDS, and RS), Jean Lecanuet; Left
Opposition-Socialist Party (PS), Francois Mitterrand; Com-
munist Party (PCF), Georges Marchais; Left Radical
Movement (MRG), Robert Fabre; Unified Socialist Party
(PSU), Michel Mousel
Voting strength (first ballot, 1978 election): extreme left,
3.3%; Communist, 21.25%; Socialist, 23.03%; left Radicals
2.28%; RPR, 22.19%; UDF, 21.39%; divided right, 1.68%;
other 4.87%
Communists: 600,000 claimed; Communist voters, 5
million average
Other political or pressure groups: Communist-con-
trolled labor union (Confederation Generale du Travail)
nearly 2.4 million members (claimed); Socialist leaning labor
union (Confederation Francaise Democratique du Travail-
CFDT) about 800,000 members est.; Independent labor
union (Force Ouvriere) about 800,000 members est.;
Independent white collar union (Confederation Generale des
Cadres) 200,000 members (claimed); National Council of
French Employers (Conseil National du Patronat Francais-
CNPF or Patronat)
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EC, ECSC,
EEC, EIB, ELDO, EMA, ESRO, EURATOM, FAO, GATT,
IAEA, IATP, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO,
IMF, IOOC, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-International
Whaling Commission, NATO (signatory), OAS (observer),
OECD, South Pacific Commission, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WEU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $347 billion (1976), $6,547 per capita; 63.9% private
consumption, 22.9% investment (including government),
13.2% government consumption; 1976 real growth rate,
5.2%; average annual growth rate, 5.2% (1965-75)
Agriculture: Western Europe's foremost producer; main
products-beef, cereals, sugar beets, potatoes, wine grapes;
self-sufficient for most temperate zone foodstuffs; food
shortages-fats and oils, tropical produce; caloric intake,
3,270 calories per day per capita (1969-70)
Fishing: catch 691,394 metric tons (1976); exports
(includes shellfish, etc.) $122 million, imports $506 million
(1976)
Major industries: steel, machinery and equipment,
textiles and clothing, chemicals, food processing, metallurgy,
aircraft, motor vehicles
Shortages: crude oil, textile fibers, most nonferrous ores,
coking coal, fats and oils
Crude steel: 22.1 million metric tons produced (1977),
440 kg per capita
Electric power: 54,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 210
billion kWh produced (1977), 3,940 kWh per capita
Exports: $65.1 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
machinery and transportation equipment, foodstuffs, agri-
cultural products, iron and steel products, textiles and
clothing, chemicals
Imports: $67.4 billion (c.i.f., 1977); principal items-
crude petroleum, machinery and equipment, chemicals, iron
and steel products, foodstuffs, agricultural products
Major trade partners: 18% West Germany; 9% Belgium-
Luxembourg; 10% Italy; 6% U.S.; 5% Netherlands; 6% U.K.;
2% Eastern Europe; 2% U.S.S.R.; 8% Franc Zone (1977)
Aid: donor-bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $13,384 million (1970-76)
Budget: (1976) expenditures 346 billion francs, revenues
329 billion francs, deficit 17 billion francs
Monetary conversion rate: I franc=US$0.2035 (1977
average)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 36,810 km total; French National Railways
(SNCF) operates 34,717 km standard gage (1.435 m); 9,374
km electrified, 15,630 km double or multiple track; 2,093
km of various gages (1,000 in to 1,445 m), privately owned
and operated
Highways: 788,580 km total; 128,745 km bitumen and
concrete (incl. 2,415 km of controlled access, divided
"AUTOROUTES"); 339,315 km bituminous treated;
301,000 km crushed stone and gravel; 19,520 km improved
earth; in addition, there are approximately 700,065 km of
local farm and forest roads
Inland waterways: 14,912 km; 5,604 km heavily traveled
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Pipelines: crude oil, 2,253 km; refined products, 4,344
km; natural gas, 22,047 km
Ports: 23 major, 165 minor
Civil air: 317 major transport aircraft, including 2 leased
in and 3 leased out
Airfields: 453 total, 434 usable; 221 with permanent-
surface runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 30 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 122 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: highly developed system provides
satisfactory telephone, telegraph, and radio and TV broad-
cast services; 15.5 million telephones (29.3 per 100 pop].); 55
AM, 94 FM, and 1,500 TV stations; 22 submarine cables; 2
communication satellite ground stations with 4 Atlantic
Ocean, and 2 Indian Ocean antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 12,888,000; fit for
military service 10,398,000; 425,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $13.9 billion; about 18% of central government budget
FRENCH GUIANA
LAND
90,909 km2; 90% forested, 10% wasteland, built-on, inland
water and other, of which .05% is cultivated and pasture
Land boundaries: 1,183 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 378 km
PEOPLE
Population: 60,000 (July 1978), annual growth rate 2.2%
(10-74 to 11-77)
Nationality: noun-French Guianese (sing., pl.); adjec-
tive-French Guiana
Ethnic divisions: 95% Negro or mulatto, 5% caucasian,
10,000 East Indian, Chinese
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic
Language: French
Literacy: 73%
Labor force: 17,012 (1967 census); services 49%, construc-
tion 21 %, agriculture 18%, industry 8%, transportation 4%;
information on unemployment unavailable
Organized labor: 7% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Department of French Guiana
Type: overseas department and region of France;
represented by one deputy in French National Assembly and
one senator in French Senate; Deputy Hector Rivierez
reelected to National Assembly 12 March 1978
Capital: Cayenne
Political subdivisions: 2 arrondissements, 19 communes
each with a locally elected municipal council
Legal system: French legal system; highest court is Court
of Appeal based in Martinique with jurisdiction over
Martinique, Guadeloupe, and French Guiana
Branches: executive: prefect appointed by Paris; legisla-
tive: popularly elected 16-member General Council and a
Regional Council composed of members of the local General
Council and of the locally elected deputy and senator to the
French parliament; judicial, under jurisdiction of French
judicial system
Government leader: Prefect Herve Bourseiller
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: General Council elections normally are held
every 5 years; last election March 1976; local elections last
held March 1977
Political parties and leaders: Parti Socialiste Guyanais
(PSG), Leopold Heder, Senator; Union du Peuple Guyanaise
(UPG), weak leftist allied with, but also reported, to have
been absorbed by the PSG; Rassemblement Pour La
Republique (RPR), Hector Rivierez, delegate to French
National Assembly
Communists: Communist party membership negligible
ECONOMY
GNP: $40 million (at market prices, 1970), $800 per
capita
Agriculture: main crops-rice, corn, manioc, cocoa,
bananas, sugarcane
Fishing: catch 933 metric tons (1975); exports $0.6 million
(1974); imports $2.2 million (1971)
Major industries: timber, rum, gold mining, production
of rosewood essence, and space center
Electric power: 29,000 kW capacity (1977); 60 million
kWh produced (1977), 985 kWh per capita
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FRENCH GUIANA/FRENCH POLYNESIA
Exports: $5 million (f.o.b., 1973); shrimp, timber, rum,
rosewood essence
Imports: $56 million (c.i.f., 1973); food (grains, processed
meat), other consumer goods, producer goods and petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-78% U.S., 11% France,
5% Martinique; imports-49% France, 10% U.S., 3%
Trinidad and Tobago (1969)
Monetary conversion rate: 4.44 French francs=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 32 km private plantation line, 0.600-meter
gage
Highways: 500 km total; 425 km paved, 75 km improved
and unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 460 km, navigable by small ocean-
going vessels and river and coastal steamers; 3,300 km
possibly navigable by native craft
Ports: 1 major (Cayenne), 7 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 13 total, 10 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m
Telecommunications: limited open-wire and radio-relay
system with about 8,906 telephones (17.8 per 100 popl.); 9
AM, 2 FM, and 2 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 13,000; 9,000 fit for
military service
FRENCH POLYNESIA
LAND
About 4,000 km2
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 12 nm
Coastline: about 2,525 km
PEOPLE
Population: 141,000 (July 1978), annual growth rate 2.3%
(current)
Nationality: noun-French Polynesian(s); adjective-
French Polynesian
Ethnic divisions: 78% Polynesian, 12% Chinese, 6% local
French, 4% metropolitan French
Religion: mainly Christian; 55% Protestant, 32% Catholic
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Territory of French Polynesia
Type: overseas territory of France, administered by
French Ministry for Overseas Territories
Capital: Papeete
CHRISTMAS IS.
FRENCH
POLYNESIA
Political subdivisions: 5 districts
Legal system: based on French; lower and higher courts
Branches: 33-member Territorial Assembly, popularly
elected; 5-member Council of Government, elected by
Assembly; popular election of one deputy to National
Assembly in Paris, also one Senator
Government leader: Charles Schmitt, Governor, ap-
pointed by French government
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: every 5 years, May 1977
Political parties and leaders: Le Front Uni, autonomist
coalition, Francis Sanford; Tahoeraa Hairaatira, conservative
Gaullist, Gaston Flosse
Voting strength (1977 election): Le Front Uni, 14 seats;
Tahoerra Huiraatira, 10 seats; Independents, 9 seats
ECONOMY
GDP: $259 million (1970) $1,960 per capita (1971)
Agriculture: coconut main crop
Major industries: maintenance of French nuclear test
base, tourism
Electric power: 36,000 kW capacity (1977); 105 million
kWh produced (1977), 740 kWh per capita
Exports: $19 million (1978); principal products-coconut
products (79%), mother-of-pearl (14%) (1971)
Imports: $211 million (1973)
Major trade partners: imports-59% France, 14% U.S.;
exports-86% France
Aid: France $16 million (1973)
Monetary conversion rate: 100 CFP=INZ$ (1971)
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 3,700 km, all types
Ports: 1 major, 6 minor
Airfields: 28 total, 28 usable; 10 with permanent-surface
runways, 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 14 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Civil air: about 3 major transport aircraft
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FRENCH POLYNESIA/GABON
Telecommunications: 14,700 telephones (11.3 per 100
popl.); 72,000 radio and 14,000 TV sets; 5 AM, 2 FM, and 6
TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of France.
NIGERIA
1
EQUATORIAL
GUINEA ?-
LibrevillE
GABON
Atlantic
Ocean
LAND
264,180 km'; 75% forested, 15% savanna, 9% urban and
wasteland, less than 1% cultivated
Land boundaries: 2,422 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 100 nm; fishing,
150 nm
Coastline: 885 km
PEOPLE
Population: 571,000 (July
rate 1.7% (7-66 to 7-70)
Nationality: noun-Gabonese
Gabonese
Ethnic divisions: about 40 Bantu tribes, including 4 major
tribal groupings (Fang, Eshira, Mbede, Okande); about
100,000 expatriate Africans and Europeans, including 30,000
French
Religion: 55% to 75% Christian, less than 1% Muslim,
remainder animist
Language: French official language and medium of
instruction in schools; Fang is a major vernacular language
Literacy: about 12%
Labor force: about 280,000 of
earners in the modern sector
Organized labor: less than 30% of wage labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Gabonese Republic
Type: republic; one-party presidential regime since 1964
Capital: Libreville
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces subdivided into 36
prefectures
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1961; judicial review of
legislative acts in Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme
Court; legal education at Center of Higher and Legal Studies
at Libreville; compulsory ICJ jurisdiction not accepted
National holiday: 17 August
Branches: power centralized in President, elected by
universal suffrage for 7-year term; unicameral 70-member
National Assembly has limited powers; judiciary
Government leader: President Omar Bongo
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: Presidential and parliamentary elections last
held February 1973
Political parties and leaders: Gabonese Democratic Party
(PDG) led by President Bongo is only legal party
Communists: no organized party; probably some Com-
munist sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, Conference of East and Central
African States, EAMA, EIB (associate), FAO, G-77, GATT,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM,
OAU, OPEC, UDEAC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $1,605 million (1975), $2,960 per capita; 36%
growth (1973-75)
Agriculture: commercial-cocoa, coffee, wood, palm oil,
rice; main food crops-bananas, manioc, peanuts, root crops;
imports food
Fishing: catch 6,056 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: petroleum production, sawmills, petro-
leum refinery, natural gas, agricultural processing; mining of
increasing importance; major minerals-manganese, uran-
ium, gold, and iron
Electric power: 125,400 kW capacity (1977); 376 million
kWh produced (1977), 665 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.2 billion (f.o.b., 1977); crude petroleum, wood
and wood products, minerals (manganese, uranium concen-
trates, gold)
Imports: $800 million (f.o.b.
UDEAC trade; mining, roadbuilding machinery, electrical
equipment, transport vehicles, foodstuffs, textiles
Major trade partners: France, U.S., West Germany, and
Curacao; preferential tariffs to EC and franc zone
Budget: 1975 est.-receipts $630 million, current expend-
itures $184 million, investment expenditures $446 million
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GABON/THE GAMBIA
Monetary conversion rate: 242.69 Communaute Finan-
ciere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 6,878 km total; 342 km paved, 5,636 km
gravel and/or improved earth, remainder unimproved earth
Inland waterways: approximately 1,600 km perennially
navigable
Pipelines: crude oil, 129 km
Ports: 3 major (Libreville, Port-Gentil, Owendo), 2 minor
Civil air: 29 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased in
and 2 leased out
Airfields: 163 total, 102 usable; 6 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 20 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: system of open-wire, radio-relay,
tropospheric scatter links and radiocommunication stations;
1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station; 5 AM, no FM, and 3 TV
stations; 7,000 telephones (1.3 per 100 popl.)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 135,000; 69,000 fit for
military service; 6,000 reach military age (20) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $52,627,100; 5.1% of central government budget
THE GAMBIA
THE Baniul
LAND
10,360 km2; 25% uncultivated savanna, 16% swamps, 4%
forest parks, 55% upland cultivable areas, built-up areas, etc.
Land boundaries: 740 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters
Coastline: 80 km
PEOPLE
Population: 568,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Gambian(s); adjective-Gambian
Ethnic divisions: over 99% Africans (Mandinka 40.8%,
Fulani 13.5%, Wolof 12.9%, remainder made up of several
smaller groups), fewer than 1% Europeans and Lebanese
Religion: 85% Muslim, 15% animist and Christian
Language: English official; Mandinka and Wolof most
widely used vernaculars
Literacy: about 10%
Labor force: approx. 165,000, mostly engaged in subsis-
tence farming; about 15,000 are wage earners (government,
trade, services)
Organized labor: 25% to 30% of wage labor force at most
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of The Gambia
Type: republic; independent since February 1965
Capital: Banjul
Political subdivisions: Banjul and 5 divisions
Legal system: based on English common law and
customary law; constitution came into force upon independ-
ence in 1965, new republican constitution adopted in April
1970; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: 18 February
Branches: cabinet of 10 members; 44-member House of
Representatives, in which 4 seats are reserved for chiefs, 4
are appointed, 35 are filled by election for 5-year terms, a
Speaker is elected by the House, and the Attorney General is
an appointed member; independent judiciary
Government leader: Alhadii Sir Dawda K. Jawara,
President
Political parties and leaders: People's Progressive Party
(PPP), Secretary General Dawda K. Jawara, United Party
(UP), John Forster, and National Convention Party, Sherrif
Dibba
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: general elections held April 1977; PPP 29 seats,
NCP 5 seats, UP 1 seat
Communists: insignificant number
Member of: AFBD, APC, Commonwealth, ECA,
ECOWAS, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD, IDA, IMF, NAM,
OAU, U.N., WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $115 million (FY76-77 est.), about $200 per capita
Agriculture: main crops-peanuts, rice, palm kernels
Fishing: catch 10,795 metric tons (1975); exports $956,000
(1974)
Major industry: peanut processing
Electric power: 10,000 kW capacity (1977); 30 million
kWh produced (1977), 55 kWh per capita
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THE GAMBIA/GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
Exports: $55 million (FY77 est.); peanuts and
products 90% to 95%, palm kernels
Imports: $76.6 million (FY77 est.); textiles,
tobacco, machinery, petroleum products
Major trade partners:
ports-U.K. and Japan
Aid: economic-U.K. (1968-71), about $8 million commit-
ment; U.S. (FY56-76), $10.6 million; other international
organizations (FY62-75), $10.8 million
Budget: (FY77 est.) current expenditures $25 million,
receipts $30 million; development expenditures $14 million,
development receipts $7.2 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Dalasi = US$0.45 (November
1977)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 1,858 km total; 190 km bituminous-surface
treated, 1,330 km gravel/laterite, remainder unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 605 km
Ports: 1 major (Banjul)
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1 usable with permanent-surface runway
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station (non-operational)
Telecommunications: adequate network of radio-relay;
2,700 telephones (0.5 per 100 pop].); 1 AM station, 1 FM
station, and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 127,000; 63,000 fit for
military service
GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
LAND
108,262 km2; 43% arable, 15% meadows and pasture, 27%
forested, 15% other
Land boundaries: 2,309 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 901 km (including islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 16,775,000, including East Berlin (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 0.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-German(s); adjective-German
Ethnic divisions: 99.7% German, .3% Slavic and other
Religion: 53% Protestant, 8% Roman Catholic, 39%
unaffiliated or other; less than 5% of Protestants and about
25% of Roman Catholics actively participate
Language: German, small Sorb (West Slavic) minority
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 8.2 million; 34.1% industry; 4.7% handi-
crafts; 6.8% construction; 11.9% agriculture; 6.8% transport
and communications; 10.1% commerce; 16.8% services; 2.5%
other
Organized labor: 87.7% of total labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: German Democratic Republic
Type: Communist state
Capital: East Berlin (not officially recognized by U.S.,
U.K., and France, which together with the U.S.S.R. have
special rights and responsibilities in Berlin)
Political subdivisions: (excluding East Berlin) 14 districts
(Bezirke), 218 counties (Kreise), 7,643 communities
(Gemeinden)
Legal system: civil law system modified by Communist
legal theory; new constitution adopted 1974; court system
parallels administrative divisions; no judicial review of
legislative acts; legal education at Universities of Berlin,
Leipzig, Halle and Jena; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction; more stringent penal code adopted 1968,
amended in 1974
National holiday: Foundation of German Democratic
Republic, 7 October
Branches: legislative-Volkskammer (elected directly);
executive-Chairman of Council of State, Chairman of
Council of Ministers, Cabinet (approved by Volkskammer);
judiciary-Supreme Court; entire structure dominated by
Socialist Unity (Communist) Party
Government leaders: Chairman, Council of State, Erich
Honecker (Head of State); Chairman, Council of Ministers,
Willi Stoph (Head of Government)
Suffrage: all citizens age 18 and over
Elections: national every 5 years; prepared by an electoral
commission of the National Front; ballot supposed to be
secret and voters permitted to strike names off ballot; more
candidates than offices available; parliamentary elections
held 17 October 1976
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Political parties and leaders: Socialist Unity (Commu-
nist) Party (SED), headed by General Secretary Erich
Honecker, dominates the regime; 4 token parties (Christian
Democratic Union, National Democratic Party, Liberal
Democratic Party, and Democratic Peasant's Party) and an
amalgam of special interest organizations participate with
the SED in National Front
Voting strength: 1976 parliamentary elections: 99.86%
voted the regime slate; 1970 local elections: 99.85% voted the
regime slate
Communists: 1.9 million party members
Other special interest groups: Free German Youth, Free
German Trade Union Federation, Democratic Women's
Federation of Germany, German Cultural Federation (all
Communist dominated)
Member of: CEMA, ICES, IPU, ITU, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, Warsaw Pact, WHO, WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $69.2 billion in 1977 (1976 prices), $4,130 per
capita; 1977 growth rate 4.0%
Agriculture: food deficit area; main crops-potatoes, rye,
wheat, barley, oats, industrial crops; shortages in grain,
vegetables, vegetable oil, beef; caloric intake, 3,000 calories
per day per capita (71)
Fish catch: 279,000 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: metal fabrication, chemicals, light
industry, brown coal, and shipbuilding
Shortages: coking coal, coke, crude oil, rolled steel
products, nonferrous metals
Crude steel: 7.00 million metric tons produced (1977,
preliminary estimate), approx. 420 kg per capita
Electric power: 18,500,000 kW capacity (1977); 92 billion
kWh produced (1977), 5,500 kWh per capita
Exports: $11,361 million (f.o.b. delivering country, 1976)
Imports: $13,196 million (f.o.b. delivering country, 1976)
Major trade partners: $25,200 million (1976); 65%
Communist countries, 35% non-Communist countries
Monetary conversion rate: 3.48 DME=US$1 for trade
data (1976 rate)
Fiscal year: same as calendar year; economic data
reported for calendar years except for caloric intake, which
is reported for the consumption year 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 14,306 km total; 13,975 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 331 km meter (1.00 m) or other narrow gage,
2,960 km double track standard gage (1.435 m); 1,508 km
overhead electrified (1976)
Highways: 127,530 km total; 47,530 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block, of which 1,679 are autobahn and limited access
roads; over 80,000 km asphalt treated, gravel, crushed stone,
and earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 2,546 km (1978)
Freight carried: rail-295.7 million metric tons, 51.7
billion metric ton/km (1976); highway-670.3 million
metric tons, 18.4 billion metric ton/km (1976); waterway-
140.0 million metric tons, 2.0 billion metric ton/km (excl.
int'l. transit traffic) (1977)
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,075 km; refined products, 350 km;
natural gas 483 km
Ports: 4 major (Rostock,
minor (1978)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: announced for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, 11.6 billion marks; about 8.9% of total
budget
GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF
LAND
248,640 km2 (including West Berlin); 33% cultivated, 23%
meadows and pastures, 13% waste or urban, 29% forested,
2% inland water
Land boundaries: 4,232 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 1,488 km (approx.)
PEOPLE
Population: 61,474,000, including West Berlin (July
1978), average annual growth rate 0.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-German(s); adjective-German
Ethnic divisions: 99% Germanic, 1% other
Religion: 48.9% Protestant, 44.7% Roman Catholic, 7.7%
other (as of 1975)
Language: German
Literacy: 99%
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Labor force: 26.7 million; 42.9% in manufacturing and
construction, 18.0% services, 12% commerce, 9.9% govern-
ment, 6.3% agriculture, 5.9% communication and transpor-
tation, 1% mining; 4.2% average unemployed as of 1977,
excluding self employed
Organized labor: 32.6% of total labor force; 41.4% of
wage and salary earners
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Federal Republic of Germany
Type: federal republic
Capital: Bonn
Political subdivisions: 10 Laender (states); Western
sectors of Berlin are ultimately controlled by U.S., U.K., and
France which, together with the U.S.S.R., have special rights
and responsibilities in Berlin
Legal system: civil law system with indigenous concepts;
constitution adopted 1949; judicial review of legislative acts
in the Supreme Federal Constitutional Court; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
Branches: bicameral parliament-Bundesrat (upper
house), Bundestag (lower house); President (titular head of
state), Chancellor (executive head of government);
independent judiciary
Government leaders: President, Walter Scheel; Chancel-
lor, Helmut Schmidt leads coalition of Social Democrats and
Free Democrats
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: next national election scheduled for fall of 1980
Political parties and leaders: Christian Democratic
Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU), Helmut Kohl,
Franz-Josef Strauss, Karl Carstens, Kurt Biedenkopf; Social
Democratic Party (SPD), Willy Brandt, Hans Koschnick,
Helmut Schmidt; Free Democratic Party (FDP), Hans-Die-
trich Genscher, Hans Friderichs, Wolfgang Mischnick;
National Democratic Party (NPD), Martin Mussgnug;
Communist Party (DKP), Herbert Mies
Voting strength (1976 election): 42.6% SPD, 48.6%
CDU/CSU, 7.9% FDP, 0.9% Splinter groups of left and right
(no parliamentary representation)
Communists: about 40,000 members and supporters
Other political or pressure groups: expellee, refugee, and
veterans groups
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EC, ECSC,
EIB, ELDO, EMA, ESRO, EURATOM, FAO, GATT, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU,
ITC, ITU, NATO, OAS (observer), OECD, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WEU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $514 billion (1977), $8,361 per capita (including
West Berlin) (1976); 55% consumption, 21% investment, 21%
government consumption (does not include total government
spending); net foreign balance 2%; average annual growth
rate 1966-77, 3.4% in constant 1970 prices
Agriculture: main crops-grains, potatoes, sugar beets;
75% self-sufficient; food shortages-fats and oils, pulses,
tropical products; caloric intake, 2,984 calories per day per
capita (1973-74)
Fishing: catch 387,000 metric tons, $155 million (1977);
exports $130 million, imports $352 million (1977)
Major industries: among world's largest producers of
iron, steel, coal, cement, chemicals, machinery, ships,
vehicles
Shortages: fats and oils, sugar, cotton, wool, rubber,
petroleum, iron ore, bauxite, nonferrous metals, sulfur
Crude steel: 60 million metric tons capacity; 38.9 million
metric tons produced (1977); 632 kg per capita
Electric power: 78,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 370
billion kWh produced (1977), 6,014 kWh per capita
Exports: $141 billion (f.o.b., 1977); manufactures 90.9%
(machines and machine tools, chemicals, motor vehicles, iron
and steel products), agricultural products 5.3%, fuels 2.1%,
raw materials 1.7%
Imports: $130 billion (c.i.f., 1977); manufactures 60.2%,
fuels 8.1%, agricultural products 16.7%, raw materials 15.0%
Major trade partners: EC 46.6% (France 12.0%, Nether-
lands 11.6%, Belgium-Luxembourg 8.2%, Italy 7.8%); other
Europe 12.7%; OPEC 9.6%; Communist economic 5.5%;
U.S. 7.0%
Aid: donor-bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $11,659 million (1970-76)
Budget: (1977) expenditures $73.8 billion, revenues $64.1
billion, deficit $9.7 billion
Monetary conversion rate: DM 2.32 (West German
marks)=US$1 (1977 average)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 33,453 km total; 29,032 km government-
owned, standard gage (1.435 m), 12,491 km double track;
9,760 km electrified; 4,421 km non-government owned;
3,997 km standard gage (1.435 m); 214 km electrified; 424
km meter gage (1.00 m); 186 km electrified
Highways: 398,720 km total; 161,400 km classified,
includes 153,160 km cement-concrete, bituminous, or stone
block (includes 5,792 km of autobahnen); 8,240 km gravel,
crushed stone, improved earth; in addition, 237,320 km of
unclassified roads of various surface types
Inland waterways: 5,222 km of which almost 70% usable
by craft of 990 metric-ton capacity or larger
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,931 km; refined products, 1,942
km; natural gas, 95,414 km
Ports: 10 major, 11 minor
Civil air: 176 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
out)
Airfields: 432 total, 388 usable; 211 with permanent-
surface runways; 3 with runways over 3,660 m, 33 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 40 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
74
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GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF/GHANA
Telecommunications: highly developed, modern tele-
communication service to all parts of the country; fully
adequate in all respects; 21.2 million telephones (34.4 per
100 popl.); 90 AM, 129 FM, and 2,350 TV stations; 6
submarine cables; satellite station with 1 Indian Ocean and 2
Atlantic Ocean antennas, and symphonic antenna
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 14,775,000; 12,378,000
fit for military service; 496,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $16,863 million; about 18% of the central government
budget
GHANA
Golf of
Guinea
LAND
238,280 km2; 19% agricultural, 60% forest and brush, 21%
other
Land boundaries: 2,2$5 km
WATER
Coastline: 539 km
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
PEOPLE
Population: 11,366,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Ghanaian(s); adjective-Ghanaian
Ethnic divisions: 99.8% Negroid African (major tribes
Ashanti, Fante, Ewe), 0.2% European and other
Religion: 45% animists, 43% Christian, 12% Muslim
Language: English official; African languages include
Akan 44%, Mole-Dagbani 16%, Ewe 13%, and Ga-Adangbe
8%
Literacy: about 25% (in English)
Labor force: 3.4 million; 61% agriculture and fishing,
16.8% industry, 15.2% sales and clerical, 4.1% services,
transportation, and communications, 2.9% professional;
400,000 unemployed
Organized labor: 350,000 or
force
approximately 10% of labor
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Ghana
Type: republic; independent since March 1957; Military
regime since January 1972
Capital: Accra
Political subdivisions: 8 administrative regions and
separate Greater Accra Area; regions subdivided into 58
districts and 267 local administrative districts
Legal system: based on English common law and
customary law; constitution suspended January 1972; legal
education at University of Ghana (Legon); has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 6 March
Branches: executive and legislative authority vested in
Supreme Military Council (SMC); independent judiciary
Government leaders: Chief of State, Chairman of SMC
General Ignatius Kutu Acheampong
Suffrage: universal over 21 under previous constitution,
now suspended
Elections: no elections since 1969; the military has
promised to return power to an elected civilian regime in
June 1979; a commission was appointed in April 1978 to
draft a new constitution by October 1978 which is then to be
reviewed by a constituent assembly
Political parties and leaders: parties banned by military
junta which took power 13 January 1972
Communists: a small number of Communists and
sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, Commonwealth, ECA, ECOWAS,
FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC,
ILO, IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WCL, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $8 billion (1976 est.) at current prices, about $390
per capita; real growth rate less than 1% (1970-77)
Agriculture: main crop-cocoa; other crops include root
crops, corn, sorghum and millet, peanuts; not self-sufficient,
but can become so
Fishing: catch 200,000 metric tons (1976 est.)
Major industries: mining, lumbering, light manufactur-
ing, fishing, aluminum
Electric power: 1,157,000 kW capacity (1977); 4.0 billion
kWh produced (1977), 370 kWh per capita
Exports: $766 million (f.o.b., 1976); cocoa (about 70%),
wood, gold, diamonds, manganese, bauxite, and aluminum
(aluminum regularly excluded from balance of payments
data)
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Imports: $466 million (f.o.b., 1976); textiles and other
manufactured goods, food, fuels, transport equipment
Major trade partners: U.K., EC, and U.S.
Budget: FY78 (proposed)-revenue $1,619 million includ-
ing grants, current expenditure $1,570 million, capital
expenditure $487 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Cedi=US$0.87
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 953 km, all 1.067-meter gage; 32 km double
track; diesel locomotives gradually replacing steam engines
Highways: 34,447 km total; 5,260 km concrete or
bituminous surface, 19,945 km gravel or laterite, 9,242 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: Volta, Ankobra, and Tano rivers
provide 235 km of perennial navigation for launches and
lighters; additional routes navigable seasonally by small
craft; Lake Volta reservoir provides 1,125 km of arterial and
feeder waterways
Pipelines: refined products, 3 km
Ports: 2 major (Tema, Takoradi), 1 naval base (Sekondi), 4
minor
Civil air: 15 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 19 total, 18 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 9 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: fair system of open-wire and cable,
radio-relay links and radiocommunication stations; 66,000
telephones (0.7 per 100 popl.); 6 AM, no FM, and 8 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,375,000; 1,309,000 fit
for military service; 108,000 reach military age (18) annually
GIBRALTAR
LAND
6.5 km2
Land boundaries:
WATER
Limits of
Coastline:
territorial waters
12 km
(claimed): 3 nm
PEOPLE
Population: 30,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1977)
Nationality: noun-Gibraltarian; adjective-Gibraltar
Ethnic divisions: mostly Italian, English, Maltese, Portu-
guese and Spanish descent
Religion: Predominantly Roman Catholic
Language: English and Spanish are primary languages;
Italian, Portuguese, and Russian also spoken; English used in
the schools and for all official purposes
Literacy: illiteracy is negligible
Labor force: approx. 14,800, including non-Gibraltarian
laborers
Organized labor: over 6,000
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Colony of Gibraltar
Type: U.K. colony
Capital: none
Legal system: English law; constitutional talks in July
1968; new system effected in 1969 after electoral enquiry
Branches: Parliamentary system comprised of the Gibral-
tar House of the Assembly (15 elected members and 3 ex
officio members), the Council of Ministers headed by the
Chief Minister, and the Gibraltar Council; the Governor is
appointed by the Crown
Government leaders: Governor and Commander in
Chief, Marshall of the RAF Sir John Grandy, Chief Minister,
Sir Joshua Hassan
Suffrage: all adult Gibraltarians, plus other U.K. subjects
resident 6 months or more
Elections: every 5 years; last held in September 1976
Political parties and leaders: Labor, Sir Joshua Hassan;
Democratic Movement, Joe Boscano
Voting strengths: (September 1976) Labor, 8 seats;
Democratic Movement, 4 seats; independents, 3 seats
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: the Housewives
Association; the Chamber of Commerce; Gibraltar Repre-
sentatives Organization
ECONOMY
Economic activity in Gibraltar centers on commerce and
large British naval and air bases; nearly all trade in the
well-developed port is transit trade and port serves also as
important supply depot for fuel, water, and ships' wares;
recently built dockyards and machine shops provide
maintenance and repair services to 3,500-4,000 vessels that
call at Gibraltar each year.
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U.K. military establishments and civil government employ
nearly half the insured labor force; local industry is confined
to manufacture of tobacco, roasted coffee, ice, mineral
waters, candy, beer, and canned fish; some factories for
manufacture of clothing are being developed; a small
segment of local population makes its livelihood by fishing;
in recent years tourism has increased in importance.
Electric power: 40,000 kW capacity (1977); 80 million
kWh produced (1977), 2,670 kWh per capita
Exports: $23.87 million (1975-76), at exchange rate of 1
pound=US$2.22; principally rexports of tobacco, petroleum,
and wine; 13% to U.K.
Imports: $60.0 million (1975-76), at exchange rate of 1
pound=US$2.22; 60% from U.K.
Major trade partners: U.K., Morocco, Portugal, Nether-
lands
Budget: (1975-76) revenue, $26.22 million; expenditure
$22.91 million, at exchange rate of 1 pound=US$2.22
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Gibraltar pound=
US$1.8062 (1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 56 km, mostly paved
Ports: 1 major (Gibraltar)
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1 permanent-surface runway, 1,220-2,439 m; 1
seaplane station
Telecommunications: international radiocommunication
facilities; automatic telephone system serving 8,100 tele-
phones (27.1 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, 1 FM, and 2 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 6,000; about
3,000 fit for military service
Defense is responsibility of United Kingdom
GILBERT ISLANDS
NOTE: On October 1, 1975, by Constitutional Order, the
Ellice Islands were formally separated from the British
colony of Gilbert and Ellice Islands, thus forming the new
colony of Tuvalu. The remaining islands in the former
Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony were renamed the Gilbert
Islands.
The islands that comprise the Gilbert Islands Colony are
the Gilbert Islands; Fanning Atoll and Washington Island in
the Line Islands; Ocean Island; and those islands claimed by
the United States: Caroline, Christmas, Flint, Malden,
Starbuck, and Vostok in the Line Islands; and Birnie,
Gardner, Hull, McKean, Phoenix, and Sydney in the
Phoenix Islands.
LAND
About 684 km'
UPEA
GILBERT
ISLANDS
UNITED'
STATES
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 3 nm
Coastline: about 1,143 km
PEOPLE
Population: 52,000 (preliminary total from census of 8
December 1973)
Nationality: noun-Gilbertese or Gilbert Islander(s);
adjective-Gilbertese, or Gilbert Islander
Ethnic divisions: Micronesian
Religion: Catholic
Literacy: less than 50%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Gilbert Islands
Type: British crown colony with large measure of
self-government
Capital: Tarawa
Branches: 36-member House of Assembly elects a Chief
Minister
Government leader: Governor John H. Smith; Chief
Minister, leremia Tabia
Political parties and leaders: Gilbertese National Party,
Christian Democratic Party
Member of: ADB
ECONOMY
GDP: $740 per capita (1974)
Agriculture: copra, subsistence crops of vegetables,
supplemented by domestic fishing
Industry: phosphate production, expected to cease in 1978
Electric power: 16,000 kW capacity (1977); 45 million
kWh produced (1977), 865 kWh per capita
Exports: $8.6 million (1970 est.); 70% phosphate, copra
Imports: $3.1 million (1970 est.); foodstuffs, fuel
Budget: (est.) revenue 5.877 million NZ$, expenditure
4.577 million NZ$
Monetary conversion rate: 0.80 Australian$=US$1
March 1976
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COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 483 km of motorable roads
Inland waterways: small network of canals, totaling 5
km, in Northern Line Islands
Ports: 1 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: 1 AM broadcast station; 250
telephones (0.1 per 100 popl.); connected with Lisbon,
Portugal, via cable broadcasts
Black
Sea
ti ? CYPRUS
Mediterranean Sea
LAND
132,608 km'; 29% arable and land under permanent
crops, 40% meadows and pastures, 20% forested, 11%
wasteland, urban, other
Land boundaries: 1,191 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm
Coastline: 13,676 km
PEOPLE
Population: 9,309,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.6% (7-66 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Greek(s); adjective-Greek
Ethnic divisions: 96% Greek, 2% Turkish, 2% other
Religion: 97% Greek Orthodox, 2.5% Muslim, 0.5% other
Language: Greek; English and French widely understood
Literacy: males about 92%; females about 73%; total
about 82%
Labor force: 3,400,000 (1975 est.); 40.5% agriculture,
25.6% industry, 33.7% services; unemployment 3%, but there
is substantial underemployment in agriculture
Organized labor: 20% of labor force est.
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Hellenic Republic
Type: presidential parliamentary government; monarchy
rejected by referendum December 8, 1974
Capital: Athens
Political subdivisions: 52 departments (nomoi) constitute
basic administrative units for country; each nomos headed
by officials appointed by central government and policy and
programs tend to be formulated by central ministries; degree
of flexibility each nomos may have in altering or avoiding
programs imposed by Athens depends upon tradition
(Thessaloniki and other areas exercise considerable tradi-
tional autonomy in local administrative decisions) and
influence which prominent local leaders and citizens may
exercise vis-a-vis key figures in central government
Legal system: new constitution enacted in June 1975
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 March
Branches: executive consisting of a President (to be
elected by Parliament) and a Prime Minister and cabinet;
legislative comprising the 300-member Parliament; inde-
pendent judiciary
Government leaders: President Constantine Tsatsos;
Prime Minister Constantine Caramanlis
Suffrage: universal age 21 and over
Elections: every 4 years; the government called for new
elections on 20 November 1977 and was returned to power,
albeit with a reduced majority
Political parties and leaders: Union of the Democratic
Center, George Mavros; New Democracy, Constantine
Caramanlis; Panhellenic Socialist Movement, Andreas
Papandreou; Communist Party-Exterior, Harilaos Florakis;
Communist Party-Interior, Haralambos Drakopoulos; and
the United Democratic Left, Ilias Iliou; Socialist Initiative,
George Mangakis; Socialist March; Christian Democracy;
Nationalist Camp, Stephanos Stephanopoulos
Voting strength: New Democracy, 172 seats; Union of the
Democratic Center, 15 seats; Panhellenic Socialist Move-
ment, 93 seats; Communists, 11 seats; Left Alliance, 2 seats;
National Camp, 5 seats; New Liberals, 2 seats
Communists: an estimated 25,000-30,000 members and
sympathizers
Member of: EC (associate), EIB (associate), EMA, GATT,
FAO, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO,
IMF, IOOC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
NATO, OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $22.9 billion (1976 est.), $2,500 per capita; 67.2%
consumption, 21.3% investment, 15.2% government; 2.7%
change in stocks; net foreign balance -6.4%; real growth
rate 5.9% (1976); typical real growth rate averages 7.5%
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Agriculture: subject to droughts; main crops-wheat,
olives, tobacco, cotton; nearly self-sufficient; food short-
ages-livestock products; caloric intake, 2,960 calories per
day per capita (1963)
Major industries: food processing, tobacco, chemicals,
textiles, petroleum refining, aluminum processing
Shortages: petroleum, minerals, feed grains
Crude steel: 899,750 metric tons produced (1976), 100 kg
per capita
Electric power: 5,400,000 kW capacity (1977); 20.0
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,165 kWh per capita
Exports: $2,565 million (f.o.b., 1976); principal items-
tobacco, cotton, fruits, textiles
Imports: $6,064 million (c.i.f., 1976); principal items-
machinery and automotive equipment, manufactured con-
sumer goods, petroleum and petroleum products, chemicals,
meat and live animals
Major trade partners: (1976)-41.6% EC, 9.2% CEMA
countries, 8.0% other
European countries,
16.6%
U.S.
Aid: economic
(authorized)-U.S.,
$139
million
(FY70-76); other Western bilateral (ODA and OOF), $649
million (1970-76); military-U.S., $672 million (FY70-76)
Budget: (1977) expenditures $6,500 million, revenues
$6,500 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 drachma=US$0.027 (1976
average)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,476 km total; 1,565 km standard gage (1.435
m) of which 36 km electrified and 100 km double track, 889
km meter gage (1.000 m), 22 km narrow gage (0.750 m); all
government-owned
Highways: 36,714 km total; 18,223 km paved, 12,451 km
crushed stone and gravel, 5,062 km improved earth, 978 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: system consists of 3 coastal canals and
3 unconnected rivers which provide navigable length of just
less than 80 km
Pipelines: crude oil, 26 km, refined products, 547 km
Ports: 17 major, 37 minor
Airfields: 70 total, 65 usable; 49 with permanent-surface
runways; 17 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 23 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Civil air: 32 major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: adequate modern networks reach
all areas on mainland and islands; 2.18 million telephones
(23.1 per 100 popl.); 31 AM, 30 FM, and 34 TV stations; 5
coaxial submarine cables; 1 satellite station with 1 Atlantic
Ocean antenna and 1 Indian Ocean antenna
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,266,000; 1,737,000 fit
for military service; about 76,000 reach military age (21)
annually
Military budget: est. for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $1,651 million; about 20% of central government
budget
GREENLAND
LAND
2,175,600 km'; less than 1 % arable (of which only a
fraction cultivated), 84% permanent ice and snow, 15%
other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 44,087 km (approx., includes minor islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 50,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.2% (1-75 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Greenlander(s); adjective-Green-
land
Ethnic divisions: 86% Greenlander (Eskimos and Green-
land-born whites), 14% Danes
Religion: Evangelical Lutheran
Language: Danish, Eskimo dialects
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 12,000; largely engaged in fishing and sheep
breeding
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Greenland
Type: province of Kingdom of Denmark; 2 representatives
in Danish parliament; separate Minister for Greenland in the
Danish cabinet
Capital: Godthaab (administrative center)
Political subdivisions: 3 counties, 19 communes
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Legal system: Danish law; transformed from colony to
province in 1953; due for home rule in spring 1979
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with Crown
and Danish parliament; executive power vested in Crown,
acting through provincial governor responsible to Minister
for Greenland; local affairs handled by provincial council
(Landsrad) subject to approval of provincial governor; 19
lower courts
Government leader: Queen Margrethe II, Governor Hans
Lassen
Suffrage: universal, but not compulsory, over age 21
Elections: held every 4 years (next 1981-coincides with
Danish elections)
Political parties: Inuit (advocating close ties with
Denmark); Sukaq (moderate socialist, advocating more
distinct Greenland identity); Siumut (a more radical party
advocating greater autonomy from Denmark)
ECONOMY
GNP: included in that of Denmark
Agriculture: arable areas largely in hay; sheep grazing;
garden produce
Fishing: catch 44,638 tons (1976); exports $35.6 million
(1975)
Major industries: mining, slaughtering, fishing, sealing
Electric power: 57,500 kW capacity (1977); 120 million
kWh produced (1977), 2,355 kWh per capita
Exports: $88.7 million (f.o.b., 1975); fish and fish
products, metallic ores and concentrates
Imports: $129.1 million (c.i.f., 1975); petroleum and
petroleum products, machinery and transport equipment,
food products
Major trade partners: (1975) Denmark 68%, Finland
7.5%, Spain 5.8%
Monetary conversion rate: 6.0031 Danish Kroner=US$1
(1977, average)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 80 km
Ports: 7 major, 16 minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft (registered in
Denmark)
Airfields: 11 total, 6 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 7 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: adequate domestic and interna-
tional service provided by cables and radio relay; 9,000
telephones (17.0 per 100 popl.); 5 AM, 6 FM, and 2 TV
stations; 2 coaxial submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: Males 15-49, included with
Denmark
Caribbean
Sea
LAND
344 kin2 (Grenada and southern Grenadines); 44%
cultivated, 4% pastures, 12% forests, 17% unused but
potentially productive, 23% built on, wasteland, other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 121 km
PEOPLE
Population: 108,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.0% (7-60 to 7-75)
Nationality: noun-Grenadian(s); adjective-Grenadian
Ethnic divisions: mainly of African-Negro descent
Religion: Church of England; other Protestant sects;
Roman Catholic
Language: English; some French patois
Literacy: unknown
Labor force: 27,314 (1960); 40% agriculture, 30%
unemployed or underemployed
Organized labor: 33% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Grenada
Type: independent state since February 1974, recognizes
Elizabeth II as Chief of State
Capital: St. Georges
Political subdivisions: 6 parishes
Legal system: based on English common law
National holiday: Independence Day, 7 February
Branches: legislative branch consists of 15-member
elected House of Representatives and 13-member Senate
appointed by the Governor; executive branch is cabinet led
by Prime Minister
Government leaders: Prime Minister Sir Eric Matthew
Cairy; U.K. Governor General Sir Leo V. deGale
Atlantic
Ocean
FRENCH
_i.. GUIANA
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Suffrage: universal adult suffrage
Elections: every 5 years; most recent general election 7
December 1976
Political parties and leaders: Grenada United Labor
Party (GULP), Eric Matthew Gairy; Peoples Alliance-a
coalition consisting of the New Jewel Movement (NJM),
Maurice Bishop; United People's Party (UPP), Winston
Whyte; Grenada National Party (GNP), Herbert A. Blaize
Voting strength (1976 election): GULP 51.7%, Peoples
Alliance, 48.3%; Legislative Council seats, GULP 9, Peoples
Alliance 6 (NJM 3, UPP 1, GNP 1, unaffilated 1)
Communists: negligible
Member of: CARICOM, G-77, IMF, OAS, SELA, U.N.
ECONOMY
GNP: $43 million (in current prices, 1976), $440 per
capita; real growth rate 1976, 13%
Agriculture: main crops-spices, cocoa, bananas
Fishing: 1,800 metric tons (1975)
Electric power: 7,000 kW capacity (1977); 25 million
kWh produced (1977), 230 kWh per capita
Exports: $13 million (f.o.b., 1976); nutmeg, cocoa beans,
bananas, mace
Imports: $25 million (c.i.f., 1976); food, machinery,
building materials
Major trade partners: exports-33% U.K., 19% West
Germany, 13% Netherlands; imports-27% West Indies,
27% U.K., 9% U.S.
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dollars=
US$1 (July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 1,000 km total; 600 km paved,
otherwise improved; 100 km unimproved
Ports: 1 major (St. Georges), 1 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 3 total, 2 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways, 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: automatic, islandwide telephone
system with 5,100 telephones (4.5 per 100 popl.); VHF and
UHF links to Trinidad and Carriacou; 3 AM stations
GUADELOUPE
LAND
1,779 km2; 24% cropland, 9% pasture, 4% potential
cropland, 16% forest, 47% wasteland, built on; area consists
of two islands
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 306 km
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DOMINICAN
-.-BEPUBLIC
PUERTO
RICO
GUADELOUPE r?
PEOPLE
Population: 331,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.5% (10-67 to 10-74)
Nationality: noun-Guadeloupian(s); adjective-Guade-
loupe
Ethnic divisions: 90% Negro or Mulatto, less than 5% East
Indian, Lebanese, Chinese, 5% Caucasian
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic, 5% Hindu and pagan
African
Language: French, creole patois
Literacy: over 70%
Labor force: 120,000; 25% agriculture, 25% unemployed
Organized labor: 11% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Department of Guadeloupe
Type: overseas department and region
represented by 3 deputies in the French National Assembly
and 2 Senators in the Senate; last deputy election, 12 March
1978
Capital: Basse-Terre
Political subdivisions: 3 arrondissements; 34 communes,
each with a locally elected municipal council
Legal system: French legal system; highest court is a court
of appeal based in Martinique with jurisdiction over
Guadeloupe, French Guiana, and Martinique
Branches: executive, Prefect appointed by Paris; legisla-
tive, popularly elected General Council of 36 members and
a Regional Council composed of members of the local
General Council and the locally elected deputies and
senators to the French parliament; judicial, under jurisdic-
tion of French judicial system
Government leader: Prefect Paul Noirot
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: General Council elections are held normally
every 5 years; last General Council election took place in
March 1976; local election last held March 1977
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Political parties and leaders: Rassemblement Pour la
Republique (RPR), Gabriel Lisette; Communist Party of
Guadeloupe (PCG), Henri Bangou; Socialist Party (MSG),
leader unknown; Progressive Party of Guadeloupe (l'PG),
Henri Hodes; Independent Republicans; Federation of the
Left
Voting strength: MSG, 1 seat in French National
Assembly; UDG, 2 seats; (1973 election)
Communists: 3,000 est.
Other political or pressure groups: Group of National
Organization of Guadeloupe (GONG)
ECONOMY
GDP: $470 million (1975), $1,428 per capita; real growth
rate (1975) 1.4%
Agriculture: main crops, sugarcane and bananas
Major industries: agricultural processing, sugar milling
and rum distillation
Electric power: 50,000 kW capacity (1977); 200 million
kWh produced (1977), 570 kWh per capita
Exports: $78 million (f.o.b., 1975); sugar, bananas, rum
Imports: $292 million (c.i.f., 1975); foodstuffs, clothing
and other consumer goods, raw materials and supplies, and
petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-71% France, 17% U.S.,
7% Germany, 5% other; imports-70% France, 9% U.S., 3%
Germany, 3% Netherlands Antilles, 3% Netherlands, 12%
other (1968)
Monetary conversion rate: 4.75 French francs=US$1
(1976)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: privately owned, narrow-gage plantation lines
Ilighways: 2,300 km total; 1,500 km paved, 800 km
gravel and earth
Ports: I major (Pointe-a-Pitre), 3 minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 8 total, 8 usable, 8 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: domestic facilities inadequate;
26,800 telephones (7.9 per 100 popl.); interisland VHF radio
links; 2 AM and 3 TV transmitters
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, included with France
GUATEMALA
LAND
108,880 km2; 14% cultivated, 10% pasture, 57% forest,
19% other
Land boundaries: 1,625 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 400 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,621,000 (January 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.9% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Guatemalan(s); adjective-Guatema-
Ian
Ethnic divisions: 41.4% Indian, 58.6% Ladino (mestizo
and westernized Indian)
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish, but over 40% of the population speaks
an Indian language as a primary tongue
Literacy: about 30%
Labor force (1974): 1.8 million; 52.5% agriculture, 10.1%
manufacturing, 21.7% services, 7.9% commerce, 3.9%
construction, 2.1% transport, 0.7% mining, 1.2% electrical,
0.8% other. Unemployment estimates vary from 3% to 25%
Organized labor: 6.4% of labor force (1975)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Guatemala
Type: republic
Capital: Guatemala
Political subdivisions: 22 departments
Legal system: civil law system; constitution came into
effect 1966; judicial review of legislative acts; legal
education at University of San Carlos of Guatemala; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 15 September
Branches: traditionally dominant executive; elected uni-
cameral legislature; 7-member (minimum) Supreme Court
Government leader: President Brig. Gen. Kjell Laugerud
Garcia; President-elect Gen. Fernando Romeo Lucas to be
inaugurated 1 July 1978
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GUATEMALA/GUINEA
Suffrage: universal over age 18, compulsory for literates,
optional for illiterates
Elections: next elections (President and Congress) 1982
Political parties and leaders: Democratic Institutional
Party (PID), Donaldo Alvarez Ruiz; Revolutionary Party
(PR), Jorge Garcia-Granados Quinonez (secretary general);
National Liberation Movement (MLN), Mario Sandoval
Alarcon; Guatemalan Christian Democratic Party (DCG),
Vinicio Cerezo Arevalo (sec. gen.); Rene de Leon Schlotter
(honorary President and party strongman); several unregis-
tered parties
Voting strength: for President-PID/PR, 269,973
(42.3%); MLN, 211,393 (33.1%); DCG, 156,730 (24.6%); for
congressional seats-PID/PR, 34 seats; MLN, 20 seats; DCG,
7 seats
Communists: Communist party outlawed; underground
membership estimated at 750
Other political or pressure groups: outlawed (Commu-
nist) Guatemalan Labor Party (PGT), Eleuterio Cabrera
Mejia (provisional secretary general)
Member of: CACM, FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU,
IWC-International Wheat Council, OAS, ODECA, SELA,
U.N., UNESCO, UPEB, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $5,485 million (1977 est.), $840 per capita; 82%
private consumption, 6% government consumption, 15%
domestic investment (1975), -8% net foreign balance
(1976); average annual real growth rate (1971-76), 5.3%
Agriculture: main products-coffee, cotton, corn, beans,
sugarcane, bananas, livestock; caloric intake, 2,200 calories
per day per capita (1967)
Fishing: catch 5,000 metric tons (1975); exports $2.6
million (1973), imports $0.7 million (1973)
Major industries: food processing, textiles and clothing,
furniture, chemicals, nonmetallic minerals, metals
Electric power: 365,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 240 kWh per capita
Exports: $782 million (f.o.b., 1976); coffee, cotton, sugar,
bananas, meat
Imports: $905 million (f.o.b., 1976); manufactured prod-
ucts, machinery, transportation equipment, chemicals, fuels
Major trade partners: exports (1974)-34% U.S., 28%
CACM, 11% West Germany, 5% Japan; imports (1974)-
31% U.S., 17% CACM, 12% Venezuela, 9% Japan, 8% West
Germany
Aid: economic-from U.S. (FY46-76), $129 million loans,
$236 million grants; from international organizations
(FY46-75),
$246
million;
from other Western countries
(1960-71),
$12.3
million;
military-assistance from U.S.
(FY46-75),
$41
million
Central
government budget (1978 est.): expenditures,
$943 million; revenues, $943 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 quetzal=US$1 (official)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 947 km, 0.914-meter gage, single-tracked; 832
km government-owned, 115 km privately owned
Highways: 13,700 km total; 2,550 km paved, 3,200 km
gravel, 5,500 km improved earth, 2,450 km unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 260 km navigable year-round; addi-
tional 730 km navigable during high-water season
Pipelines: crude oil, 48 km
Ports: 2 major (Puerto Barrios, Santo Tomas de Castilla), 3
minor
Airfields: 383 total, 381 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 16 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Civil air: 11 major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: modern telecom facilities limited
to Guatemala City; 58,500 telephones (0.9 per 100 popl. ); 97
AM, 20 FM, and 5 TV stations; connection into Central
American microwave net
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,489,000; 966,000 fit
for military service; about 65,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $58.5 million; 6.2% of central government
budget
LAND
246,050 kmz; 3% cropland, 10% forest
Land boundaries: 3,476 km
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 130
Coastline: 346 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,898,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Guinean(s); adjective-Guinean
Ethnic divisions: 99% African (3 major tribes-Fulani,
Malinke, Susu; and 15 smaller tribes)
Religion: 75% Muslim, 25% animist, Christian, less than
1%
Language: French official; each tribe has own language
Literacy: 5% to 10%; French only significant written
language
Labor force: 1.8 million, of whom less than 10% are wage
earners; most of population engages in subsistence agricul-
ture
Organized labor: virtually 100% of wage labor force
loosely affiliated with the National Confederation of
Guinean Workers, which is closely tied to the PDG
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Guinea
Type: republic; under one-party presidential regime
Capital: Conakry
Political subdivisions: 29 administrative regions, 209
arrondissements, about 8,000 local entities at village level
Legal system: based on French civil law system,
customary law, and presidential decree; constitution adopted
1958; no constitutional provision for judicial review of
legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 2 October
Branches: executive branch dominant, with power
concentrated in President's hands and a small group who are
both ministers and members of the party's politburo;
unicameral National Assembly and judiciary have little
independence
Government leader: President Ahmed Sekou Toure, who
has been designated "The Supreme Leader of the
Revolution"
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: approximate schedule-5 years parliamentary,
latest in 1975; 7 years presidential, latest in 1975
Political parties and leaders: only party is Democratic
Party of Guinea (PDG), headed by Sekou Toure
Communists: no Communist party, although there are
some sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, ECA, ECOWAS, FAO, G-77, IBA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, Niger River Commis-
sion, NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $820.8 (1976), $180 per capita
Agriculture: cash crops-coffee, bananas, palm products,
peanuts, and pineapples; staple food crops-cassava, rice,
millet, corn, sweet potatoes; livestock raised in some areas
Major industries: alumina, light manufacturing and
processing industries, bauxite mining
Electric power: 101,500 kW capacity (1977); 500 million
kWh produced (1977), 90 kWh per capita
Exports: $240 million (f.o.b., 1976); alumina, bauxite,
coffee, pineapples, bananas, palm kernels
Imports: $248 million (f.o.b., 1976); petroleum products,
metals, machinery and transport equipment, foodstuffs,
textiles
Major trade partners: Communist countries, Western
Europe (including France), U.S.
Budget: (FY77 est.) current revenue $238 million, current
expenditures $176 million
Monetary conversion rate: 21.25 syli=US$1 floating (end
1977)
Fiscal year: 1 October-30 September
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 805 km meter gage (1.00 m), 8 km
gage
Highways: 7,604 km total; 4,949 km paved, remainder
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 1,795 km; 500 km navigable by small
oceangoing vessels, 1,295 km navigable by shallow-draft
steamers and barges
Ports: 1 major (Conakry), 3 minor
Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 17 total, 16 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 9 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 3 seaplane landing areas
Telecommunications: inadequate system of
lines, small radiocommunication stations, and 1 radio-relay
link; principal center Conakry, secondary center Kankan;
8,300 telephones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 1 AM station, no FM,
and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 995,000; 502,000 fit for
military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 September
1970 (latest information available), $6,073,000; 8.0% of
central government budget
GUINEA-BISSAU
(formerly Portuguese Guinea)
LAND
36,260 km2 (includes Bijagos archipelago)
Land boundaries: 740 km
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BISSAU -UUINEA
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 150 nm (fishing
200 nm)
Coastline: 274 km
PEOPLE
Population: 620,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Guinean(s); adjective-Guinean
Ethnic divisions: about 99% African (Balanta 30%, Fulani
20%, Mandyako 14%, Malinke 13%, and 23% other tribes);
less than 1% European and mulatto
Religion: 66% animist, 30% Muslim, 4% Christian
Language: Portuguese and numerous African languages
Literacy: 3% to 5%
Labor force: bulk of population engaged in subsistence
agriculture
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Guinea-Bissau
Type: republic; achieved independence from Portugal in
September 1974; constitution promulgated 1974
Capital: Bissau
Political subdivisions: 9 municipalities, 3 circumscrip-
tions (predominantly indigenous population)
Legal system: to be determined
National holiday: 12 September
Branches: National Popular Assembly to be elected for
three-year term; Council of State Commissars, 16 members;
the official party is the supreme political institution.
Government leaders: President of Council of State and
Chief of State is Luis Cabral; Principal Commissioner (Head
of Government), Francisco Mendes; Secretary General of the
Official party, Aristides Pereira
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: none held to date
Political parties and leaders: Partido Africano da
Independencia da Guinee e Cabo Verde (PAIGC), led by
Aristide Pereira, only legal party; Front de Lutte pour
l'Independence Nationale de la Guinea (FLING), a largely
dormant, loose coalition of nationalist elements opposed the
PAIGC, leadership fragmented
Communists: none known
Member of: G-77, NAM, OAU, U.N., UPU
ECONOMY
GDP: $112 million (est. 1975), $230 per capita
Agriculture: main crops-palm oil, root crops, rice,
coconuts, peanuts
Electric power: 11,000 kW capacity (1977); 17 million
kWh produced (1977), 30 kWh per capita
Exports: $11 million (f.o.b., 1977); principally peanuts,
coconuts
Imports: $31 million (c.i.f., 1977); manufactured goods,
fuels, transport equipment, rice
Major trade partners: mostly Portugal, also immediate
neighbors
Aid: Portugal, U.S.S.R.
Monetary conversion rate: using Portuguese currency;
40.643 escudos=US$1 (November 1977)
Fiscal year: probably is the calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: approx. 3,218 km (418 km bituminous,
remainder earth)
Inland waterways: 1,600 km
Ports: 1 major (Bissau), 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 60 total, 59 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 8 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: limited system of open-wire lines
and radiocommunication stations; 2,700 telephones (0.5 per
100 popl.); 1 AM, 1 FM and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES:
Military manpower: males 15-49, 122,000; 70,000 fit for
military service
LAND
214,970 km2; 1% cropland, 3% pasture, 8% savanna, 66%
forested, 22% water, urban, and waste
Land boundaries: 2,575 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 459 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 813,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Guyanese (sing., p1.); adjective-
Guyanese
Ethnic divisions: 51% East Indians, 43% Negro and
Negro mixed, 4% Amerindian, 2% white and Chinese
Religion: 57% Christian, 33% Hindu, 9% Muslim, I %
other
Language: English
Literacy: 86%
Labor force: 242,000 (1975); 29% agriculture, 31%
manufacturing/mining, 40% services; 21% unemployed
Organized labor: 34% of labor force
(1976)
Monetary conversion
Communists: est. 100 hard-core within PPP; top echelons
of PPP and PYO (Progressive Youth Organization, militant
wing of the PPP) include many Communists, but rank and
file is conservative and-non-Communist; small but unknown
number of orthodox Marxist-Leninists within PNC, some of
whom are PPP turncoats
Other political or pressure groups: Trades Union
Congress (TUC); Working People's Alliance (WPA); Work-
ing People's Vanguard Party (WPVP); Guyana Council of
Indian Organizations (GCIO); Civil Liberties Action Com-
mittee (CLAC); the latter two organizations are small and
active but not well organized
Member of: CARICOM, CDB, FAO, G-77, GATT, IADI3,
IRA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, NAM,
OAS (observer), SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $412 million
rate 1976, 1.9% est.
US$=G$2.55
Fiscal year:
Agriculture: main crops-sugarcane, rice, other food
crops; food shortages-wheat flour, cooking oil, processed
meat, dairy products; caloric intake, 2,180 calories per day
per capita (1967)
Fishing: catch 20,123 metric tons (1975); exported 4,445
metric tons valued at $3 million in 1975
Major industries: bauxite mining, alumina
sugar and rice milling, timber
Electric power: 175,000 kW capacity (1977); 370 million
kWh produced (1977), 495 kWh per capita
Exports: $257 million (f.o.b., 1976); bauxite, sugar,
alumina, rice, shrimp, molasses, timber, diamonds, rum
Imports: $371 million (c.i.f., 1976); manufactures, ma-
chinery, food, petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-27.4% U.K., 20.5% U.S.,
16.3% CARICOM, 2.4% Canada; imports-28% U.S., 23%
U.K., 22% CARICOM, 4% Canada (1976)
Aid: economic-authorizations from U.S. (FY53-76), $55
million in loans, $26 million in grants; commitments from
Communist countries-China (1972-76), $36 million in
loans, and East Germany (1974), $10 million in loans; from
international organizations (FY46-76), $69 million
Budget: revenue, $186 million; expenditure, $312 million
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Cooperative Republic of Guyana
Type: republic within Commonwealth
Capital: Georgetown
Political subdivisions: 9 administrative districts
Legal system: based on English common law with certain
admixtures of Roman-Dutch law; has not accepted compul-
sory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 23 February
Branches: Council of Ministers presided over by Prime
Minister; 53-member unicameral legislative National Assem-
bly (elected); Supreme Court
Government leader: Prime Minister L. F. S. Burnham
Suffrage: universal over
amendment August 1973
Elections: last held in July 1973; next election must be
called within 5 years
Political parties and leaders: People's National Congress
(PNC), L. F. S. Burnham; People's Progressive Party (PPP),
Cheddi Jagan; United Force (UF), Feilden Singh
Voting strength (1973 election): 70.2% PNC, 26.2% PNC,
3.6% other
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 109 km total, all single track;
meter gage, 29 km 1.067-meter gage
Highways: 4,100 km total; 950 km paved, 950 km gravel
1,000 km improved, 1,200 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 5,900 km; Demerara River navigable
to Mackenzie by ocean steamers, others by ferryboats, small
craft only
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Ports: 1 major (Georgetown), 3 minor
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 95 total, 88 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 13 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: highly developed telecom system
with radio-relay network and over 22,500 telephones (2.6
per 100 popl.); tropospheric scatter link to Trinidad; 5 AM, 1
FM and no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 189,000; 144,000 fit for
military service
HAITI
HAITI~~ PUERTO
Port au
JAMAICA Prince
LAND
27,713 km2; 31% cultivated, 18% rough pastures,
forested, 44% unproductive
Land boundary: 361 km
spoken by only 10%
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 1,771 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,534,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Haitian(s); adjective-Haitian
Ethnic divisions: over 90% Negro, nearly 10% mulatto,
few whites
Religion: 10% Protestant, 75% to 80% Roman Catholic (of
d
oo)
which an overwhelming majority also practice Voo
Language: French (official)
population; all speak Creole
Literacy: 10% to 12%
Labor force: 2.3 million (est. 1975); 79% agriculture, 14%
services, 7% industry, 5% unemployed; shortage of skilled
labor; unskilled labor abundant
Organized labor: less than 1%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Haiti
Type: republic under the 14-year dictatorship of Francois
Duvalier who was succeeded upon his death on 21 April
1971 by his son, Jean-Claude
Capital: Port-au-Prince
Political subdivisions: 5 departments (despite constitu-
tional provision for 9)
Legal system: based on Roman civil law system;
constitution adopted 1964 and amended 1971; legal educa-
tion at State University in Fort-au-Prince and private law
colleges in Cap-Haitien, Les Cayes, Gonaives, and Jeremie;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 January
Branches: lifetime President, unicameral 58-member
legislature of very limited powers, judiciary appointed by
President
Government
Duvalier
Suffrage:
leader: President-for-life Jean-Claude
Elections: constitution as amended in 1971 provides for
lifetime president to be designated by his predecessor and
ratified by electorate in plebiscite; legislative elections,
which are held every 6 years, last held February .1973
Political parties: National Unity Party, only legal party;
United Haitian Communist Party (PUCH), illegal (Com-
munist)
Voting strength (1973 legislative elections): 100% Na-
tional Unity Party (Duvalier)
Communists: strength unknown; party leaders believed in
exile
Other political or pressure groups: none
Member of: FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, OAS,
SELA, U.N., UNESCO, IJPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $1.0 billion (1976), $197 per capita; real growth rate
1976, 4.7%
Agriculture: main crops-coffee, sugarcane, rice, corn,
sorghum, pulses; caloric intake, 1,850 calories per day per
capita
Major industries: sugar refining, textiles, flour milling,
cement manufacturing, bauxite mining, tourism, light
assembly industries
Electric power: 90,000 kW capacity (1977); 175 million
kWh produced (1977), 40 kWh per capita
Exports: $111 million (f.o.b., 1976); coffee, light industrial
products, bauxite, sugar, essential oils, sisal
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Imports: $158 million (f.o.b., 1976); consumer durables,
foodstuffs, industrial equipment, petroleum products, con-
struction materials
Major trade partners: exports-52% U.S.; imports-47%
U.S. (1976)
Aid: economic authorizations-from U.S. (FY46-75), $46
million loans, $126 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-76), $169 million; military authoriza-
tions-from U.S. (FY46-76), $4 million in grants
Budget: (1976) revenue, $133 million; expenditure, $146
million
Monetary conversion rate: 5 gourdes=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 October-30 September
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 80 km narrow gage (0.760 m), single-track,
privately owned industrial line; 8 km dual-gage 0.760- to
1.065-meter gage, government line, dismantled
Highways: 3,200 km total; 600 km paved, 950 km
otherwise improved, 1,650 km unimproved
Inland waterways: negligible; about 100 km navigable
Ports: 2 major (Port-au-Prince, Cap Haitian), 12 minor
Civil air: 7 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 14 total, 13 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: all domestic facilities inadequate,
international facilities slightly better; telephone expansion
program underway; 17,800 telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); 40
AM, 5 FM, and 1 TV station; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,180,000; 628,000 fit
for military service; about 51,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 September
1978, $10.4 million; about 13.4% of operational budget
HONDURAS
LAND
112,150 km2; 27% forested, 30% pasture, 36% waste and
built-up, 7% cropland
Land boundaries: 1,530 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 820 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,517,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Honduran(s); adjective-Honduran
Ethnic divisions: 90% mestizo, 7% Indian, 2% Negro, and
1% white
Religion: about 97% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 47% of persons
1970)
10 years of age and over (est.
Labor force: approx. 900,000 (est. mid-1972)
;
agriculture, 12% services, 8% manufacturing, 5% commerce,
6%
unemployed, 3% unspecified
Organized labor: 7% to 10% of
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic
labor force (mid-1972)
Type: republic
Capital: Tegucigalpa
Political subdivisions: 18
Legal system: based on Roman and Spanish civil law;
some influence of English common ]aw; constitution adopted
1965; judicial review of legislative acts in Supreme Court;
legal education at University of Honduras in Tegucigalpa;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 15 September
Branches: constitution provides for elected President,
unicameral legislature, and national judicial branch
Government leader: Brig. Gen. Juan Alberto Melgar
Castro
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: government leaders have indicated an inten-
tion to hold elections in 1979
Political parties and leaders: all parties, even legal ones,
are dormant at present; Liberal Party (PLH), Modesto Rodas
Alvarado, Carlos Roberto Reina Idiaguez, Jorge Bueso Arias;
National Party (PNH), Alejandro Lopez Cantarero, Ricardo
Zuniga Augustinus; Mario Rivera Lopez, Martin Aquero;
Popular Progressive Party (PPP) (uninscribed), Gonzalo
Carias Castillo; National Innovation and Unity Party (PINU)
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(uninscribed), Miguel Andonie Fernandez; Workers Party of
Honduras (PTH) (Communist) (uninscribed), Rogue Ochoa;
Communist Party of Honduras/Soviet (PCH/S-outlawed),
Dionisio Ramos Bejarano; Communist Party of Honduras/
China (PCH/C-outlawed), Agapito Robledo Castro
Voting strength (1971 elections): National Party (PNH)
306,028; Liberal Party (PLH) 276,777
Communists: about 650; 500 sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: National Association
of Honduran Campesinos (ANACH); Council of Honduran
Private Enterprise (COHEP); Confederation of Honduran
Workers (CTH)
Member of: CALM, FAO, G-77, IADB, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITU, OAS, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPEB, UPU, WHO, WMO
Ports: 3 major (Puerto Cortes, La Ceiba, Tela), 9 minor
Civil air: 19 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 244 total, 219 usable; 4 with permanent-surface e na
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; with ruwys
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: improved, but still inadequate;
microwave ve net; 19,500
connection into Central American
TV
telephones (0.7 per 100 popl.); 104 stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 680,000; 401,000 fit for
military service; about 31,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal
December 1978, $31.4 million; about
government budget (includes the armed
military)
ECONOMY
GDP: $1,215 million (1976), $430 per capita; 79% private
consumption, 10% government consumption, 22% domestic
investment; - 11% net foreign balance (1975); real growth
rate, average 1971-75, 2.6%; real growth rate 1976, 6.8%
Agriculture: main crops-bananas, coffee, corn, beans,
cotton, sugarcane, tobacco; caloric intake, 2,200 calories per
day per capita (1970)
Fishing: catch 3,262 metric tons (1975); exports est. $0.8
million (1976); imports $0.8 million (1974)
Major industries: agricultural processing, textiles, cloth-
ing, wood products 450 million
Electric power: 172,500 kW capacity (1977);
kWh produced (1977), 155 kWh per capita
Exports: $404 million (f.o.b., 1976); bananas, coffee,
lumber, meat, petroleum products manufactured Prod-
ucts, $427 million (f.o.b. 1976); manu
ucts, machinery, transportation equipment, chemicals,
petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-51% U.S.., 12Venezuela,
oM,
11% West germany; imports-42% U.S., 13% CALM, 7% Japan, 3% West Germany
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $122
million loans, $96 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-73), $291 million; from other Western
countries (1960-73), $7.0 million; military-assistance from
U.S. (FY46-75), $20 million
Budget (1977): expenditures, $312 million
Monetary conversion rate: 2 lempiras=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
(official)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 574 km total; 325 km 1.067 meter gage, 249
km 0.914-meter gage
Highways: 8,700 km total; 1,150 km bituminous surfaced,
2,500 km gravel surfaced or improved earth, 5,050 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 1,200 km navigable by small craft
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 733 km
PEOPLE annual growth
Population: 4,585,000 (July 1978), average
rate 1.6% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: adjective-Hong Kong
Ethnic divisions: 98% Chinese, 2% other
Religion: 10% Christian, 90% eclectic mixture of local
religions
Language: Chinese, English
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year ending 31
7.5% of central
forces and other
LAND
1,036 km'; 14% arable, 10% forested, 76% other (mainly
grass, shrub, steep hill country)
Land boundaries: 24 km
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HONG KONG/HUNGARY
Literacy: 75%
Labor force (1976 Census): 1.87 million; 45.3% manufac-
turing, 18.6% services, 6.0% construction, mining, quarrying
and utilities, 19.4% commerce, 2.6% agriculture, forestry,
fisheries, and hunting, 7.3% communications, 0.7% other;
underemployment is a serious problem
Organized labor: 21% of 1976 labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Hong Kong
Type: U.K. crown colony
Capital: None
Political subdivisions: Hong Kong, Kowloon, and New
Territories
Legal system: English common law
Branches: Governor assisted by advisory Executive
Council; he legislates with advice and consent of Legislative
Council; Urban Council which alone includes elected
representatives, responsible for health, recreation, and
resettlement; independent judiciary
Government leader: Sir C. M. MacLehose, Governor and
Commander in Chief
Suffrage: limited to 200,000 to 300,000 professional or
skilled persons
Elections: every 2 years to select one-half of elected
membership of Urban Council; other Urban Council
members appointed by the Governor
Political parties: Civic Association; Reform Club; Socialist
Democratic Party; Hong Kong Labour Party
Voting strength: (elected Urban Council members) Civic
Association 4, Reform Club 3, and 1 independent
Communists: an estimated 2,000 cadres affiliated with
Communist Party of China
Other political or pressure groups: Federation of Trade
Unions (Communist controlled), Hong Kong and Kowloon
Trade Union Council (Nationalist Chinese dominated),
Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce, Chinese
General Chamber of Commerce (Communist controlled),
Federation of Hong Kong Industries, Chinese Manufactur-
ers) Association of Hong Kong
Member of: ADB
ECONOMY
GDP: $9.5 billion ( 1976, in 1976 prices), $2,093 per
capita (est.); average real growth 4.8% (1970-75)
Agriculture: agriculture occupies a minor position in the
economy; main products--rice, vegetables, dairy products;
less than 2.0% self-sufficient; food shortages-rice, wheat
Major industries: textiles and clothing, tourism, plastics,
electronics, light metal products, food processing
Shortages: industrial raw materials, water, food
Electric power: 3,127,000 kW capacity (1977); 8,375
million kWh produced (1977), 1,835 kWh per capita
Exports: $9.7 billion (f.o.b., 1977), including $1.4 billion
reexports; principal products clothing, plastic articles,
textiles, electrical goods, wigs, footwear, light metal
manufactures
Imports: $10.5 billion (c.i.f., 1977)
Major trade partners: (1977) exports-38.7% U.S., 10.5%
West Germany, 8.7% U.K.; imports-23.7% Japan, 16.6%
China, 12.5% U.S.
Budget: (77/78) $1.82 billion
Monetary conversion rate: HK$4.62=US$1 (December
1977)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 35 km standard gage (1.435 m); government
owned
Highways: 966 km total; 660 km paved, 306 km gravel
and crushed stone, or earth
Ports: 1 major
Civil air: 17 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: modern facilities provide domestic
and international services; excellent broadcast coverage
provided by wired and radio broadcast stations; closed-cir-
cuit TV and TV broadcast facilities; 1.1 million telephones;
2.5 million radio receivers; 100,000 wired-speakers; 2 FM, 2
AM stations; wired-broadcast network; 859,000 TV receiv-
ers, 2 TV stations, 2 closed-circuit TV networks; radio relay
link to Taiwan; 2 international communications satellite
ground stations; coaxial cable link to Canton; 5 submarine
cables; submarine cable to Japan and Philippines completed
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,201,000; 937,000 fit
for military service; about 55,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Defense is the responsibility of U.K.
HUNGARY
LAND
92,981 kmz; 60% arable, 14%
forested, 10% other
Land boundaries: 2,245 km
PEOPLE
Population: 10,693,000 (July
growth rate 0.4% (current)
other agricultural, 16%
1978), average
Nationality: noun-Hungarian(s); adjective-Hungarian
Ethnic divisions: 92.4% Magyar, 2.5% German, 3.3%
Gypsy, 0.7% Jews, 1.1% other
Religion: 67.5% Roman Catholic, 20.0% Calvinist, 5.0%
Lutheran, 7.5% atheist and other
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Member of: CEMA, Danube Commission, FAO, GATT,
IAEA, ICAC, ICAO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc
Study Group, IMCO, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, Warsaw Pact, WHO, WIPO, WMO
Language: 98.2% Magyar, 1.8% other
Literacy: 97%
Labor force: 5,085,500 (1 January 1976); 23% agriculture,
44% industry and building, 16% trade and transport, 17%
other nonagricultural
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Hungarian
Type: Communist state
Capital: Budapest
Political subdivisions: 19 megyes (counties), 5 autono-
mous cities in county status, 97 jaras (districts)
Legal system: based on Communist legal theory, with
both civil law system (civil code of 1960) and common law
elements; constitution adopted 1949 amended 1972; Su-
preme Court renders decisions of principle that sometimes
have the effect of declaring legislative acts unconstitutional;
legal education at Lorand Eotvos Tudomanyegyetem School
of Law in Budapest and 2 other schools of law; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Anniversary of the Liberation, 4 April
Branches: executive-Presidential Council (elected by
Parliament); legislative-Parliament (elected by direct suf-
frage); judicial-Supreme Court (elected by Parliament)
Government leaders: Pal Losonczi, President, Presiden-
tial Council; Gyorgy Lazar, Chairman, Council of Ministers
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: every 5 years; national and local elections are
held separately
Political parties and leaders: Hungarian Socialist (Com-
munist) Workers Party (sole party); Janos Kadar is First
Secretary of Central Committee
Voting strength (1975 election): 7,497,061 (99.6 %) for
Communist-approved candidates; 30,108 (0.4%) invalid and
negative votes; total eligible electorate about 7.76 million;
next elections will be held in 1980
Communists: about 754,000 party members (March 1975)
ECONOMY
GNP: $27.8 billion in 1977 (at 1976 prices), $2,610 per
capita; 1977 growth rate, 4.8%
Agriculture: normally self-sufficient; main crops-corn,
wheat, potatoes, sugar beets, wine grapes; caloric intake
3,140 calories per day per capita (1970)
Major industries: mining, metallurgy, engineering indus-
tries, processed foods, textiles, chemicals (especially pharma-
ceuticals)
Shortages: metallic ores (except bauxite), copper, high
grade coal, forest products, crude oil
Crude steel: 3.72 million metric tons produced (1977),
350 kg per capita
Electric power: 5,100,000 kW capacity (1977); 23.3
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,185 kWh per capita
Exports: $7,959 million (f.o.b., 1977); 27% machinery,
18% industrial consumer goods, 30% raw materials and
semimanufactures, 23% food and raw materials for the food
industry, energy sources 2% (distribution for 1977)
Imports: $8,558 million (c.i.f., 1977); 21% machinery, 8%
industrial consumer goods, 49% raw materials and semi-
manufactures; 11% food and raw materials for the food
industry, energy sources 11% (distribution for 1977)
Major trade partners: $13,371 million (1976); 66% with
Communist countries, 34% with non-Communist countries
Aid: U.S.S.R.-$338 million extended (1956-66), $10
million extended in 1967, $167 million extended in 1968; to
less developed non-Communist countries-$764 million
(1954-77)
Monetary conversion rate: 40.96 forints=US$1 (commer-
cial); 20.60 forints=US$1 (noncommercial) (1977)
Fiscal year: same as calendar year; economic data
reported for calendar years
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 8,392 km total; 7,879 km standard gage (1.435
m), 478 km narrow gage (mostly 0.760 m), 35 km broad gage
(1.524 m), 1,159 km double track, 1,303 km electrified;
government owned (1975)
Highways: 99,595 km total; 32,583 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block; 10,408 km asphalt treated, gravel, crushed stone;
56,604 km earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 1,688 km (1977)
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,287 km; refined products, 500 km;
natural gas, 2,896 km
Freight carried: rail-131.7 million metric tons, 23.5
billion metric ton/km (1975); highway-479.4 million
metric tons, 8.1 billion metric ton/km (1975); waterway-
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est. 14.2 million metric tons, 8.3 billion metric ton/km incl.
intl. transit traffic in approximately 308 waterway craft
with 231,000 metric ton capacity
River ports: 2 principal (Budapest, Dunauivaros); no
maritime ports; outlets are Rostock, GDR; and Gdansk,
Gdynia, and Szczecin in Poland; and Galati and Brails in
Romania
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,650,000; 2,314,000 fit
for military service; about 70,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: announced for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, est. 14.4 billion forints; about 3.7% of total
budget
GREENIANtI
Jan Mayen
Island
Greenland
Sea Norwegian
Strait
Denmark
Reykjavik,
Atlantic
Ocean
LAND
102,952 km?; arable negligible, 22% meadows and
pastures, forested negligible, 78% other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 4 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 4,988 km
PEOPLE
Population: 223,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.7% (12-76 to 12-77)
Nationality: noun-Icelander(s); adjective-Icelandic
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous white population
Religion: 95% Evangelical Lutheran, 3% other Protestant
and Roman Catholic, 2% no affiliation
Language: Icelandic
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 90,000; 22.6% agriculture and fishing; 25.6%
mining and manufacturing; 10.7% construction; 12.8%
commerce; 7.8% transportation and communications; 15.2%
services; and 5.7% other; unemployment 300
Organized labor: 60% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Iceland
Type: republic
Capital: Reykjavik
Political subdivisions: 23
incorporated towns
Legal system: civil law system based on Danish law;
constitution adopted 1944; legal education at University of
Iceland; does not accept compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Anniversary of the Establishment of
the Republic, 17 June
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with President
and parliament (Althing); executive power vested in
President but exercised by cabinet responsible to parliament;
Supreme Court and 29 lower courts
Government leaders: President Kristian Eldjarn; Prime
Minister Geir Hallgrimsson
Suffrage: universal, over age 20; not compulsory
Elections: parliamentary to take place 25 June 1978,
every 4 years; presidential, every 4 years
Political parties and leaders: Independence (conserva-
tive), Geir Hallgrimsson; Progressive, Olafur Johannesson;
Social Democratic, Benedikt Grondal; People's Alliance
(Communist front), Ragnar Arnalds; Organization of Liber-
als and Leftists, Magnus Torfi Olafsson
Voting strength (1974 election): 42.7% Independence,
24.9% Progressive, 9.1% Social Democratic, 18.3% People's
Alliance, organization of leftists and liberals 4.6%
Communists: est. 2,200; a number of sympathizers, as
indicated by 20,922 votes cast for People's Alliance in 1974
election
Member of: Council of Europe, EC (free trade agreement
pending resolution of fishing limits issue), EFTA, FAO,
GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, IWC-International Whaling
Commission, NATO, Nordic Council, OECD, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $1,415 million (1976), $6,343 per capita; 60.2%
consumption, 29.4% investment, 10% government, 0.7%
change in stocks; 1.1% net foreign balance (1976); 1976
growth rate 1.9%, constant prices
Agriculture: cattle, sheep, dairying, hay, potatoes, turnips;
food shortages-grains, sugar, vegetable and other fibers;
caloric intake, 2,900 calories per day per capita (1964-66)
Fishing: landed 982,100 metric tons; exports $289.9
million (1976)
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Major industries: fish processing, aluminum smelting,
diatomite production, hydro-electricity
Shortages: grain, fuel, wood, minerals, vegetable fibers
Electric power: 653,000 kW capacity (1.977); 2.5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 11,050 kWh per capita
Exports: $512.3 million (f.o.b., 1977); fish and fish
products, animal products, aluminum, diatomite
Imports: $608.3 million (c.i.f., 1977); machinery and
transportation equipment, petroleum, foodstuffs, textiles
Major trade partners: (1975) exports-U.S. 29%, EC 25%,
U.S.S.R. 11%; imports-EC 45%, U.S. 9%, U.S.S.R. 10%
Aid: economic authorizations: U.S., $10 million (FY70-76)
Budget: (1977, approved) expenditures $448 million,
revenues $452 million
Monetary conversion rate: 198.9 kronur=US$1 (1977);
182.2 kronur=US$1 (1976)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 12,343 km total; 166 km bitumen and
concrete; 1,284 km bituminous treated and gravel; 10,893
km earth
Ports: 4 major (Akureyri, Hafnarfjordhur, Reykjavik,
Seydhisfiordhur), and about 50 minor
Civil air: 23 major transport aircraft, including 4 leased in
Airfields: 126 total, 101 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 10 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: adequate domestic service, wire
and radio communication system; 93,700 telephones (42.4
per 100 popl.); 17 AM, 14 FM, and 80 TV stations; 2 coaxial
submarine cables; Comsat station under construction
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 54,000; 49,000 fit for
military service (Iceland has no conscription or compulsory
military service)
LAND
3,136,500 km2 (includes Indian part of Jammu-Kashmir,
Sikkim, Goa, Damao and Diu); 50% arable, 5% permanent
meadows and pastures, 20% desert, waste, or urban, 22%
forested, 3% inland water
Land boundaries: 12,700 km2
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm; additional 100 nm is fisheries conservation zone,
December 1968; archipelago concept baselines); 200 nm
exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 7,000 km (includes offshore islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 660,722,000, including Sikkim and the
Indian-held part of disputed Jammu-Kashmir (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Indian(s); adjective-Indian
Ethnic divisions: 72% Indo-Aryan, 25% Dravidian, 3%
Mongoloid and other
Religion: 83.5% Hindu, 10.7% Muslim, 1.8% Sikh, 2.6%
Christian, 0.7% Buddhist, 0.7% other
Language: 24 languages spoken by a million or more
persons each; numerous other languages and dialects, for the
most part mutually unintelligible; Hindi is the national
language and primary tongue of 30% of the people; English
enjoys "associate" status but is the most important language
for national, political, and commercial communication;
Hindustani, a popular variant of Hindi/Urdu, is spoken
widely throughout northern India
Literacy: males 39%; females 18%; both sexes 29% (1971
census)
Labor force: about 197 million; 70% agriculture, more
than 10% unemployed and underemployed; shortage of
skilled labor is significant and unemployment is rising
Organized labor: about 2.5% of total labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of India
Type: federal republic
Capital: New Delhi
Political subdivisions: 22 states, 9 union territories
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
adopted 1950; limited judicial review of legislative acts;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Anniversary of the Proclamation of the
Republic, 26 January
Branches: parliamentary government, national and state;
relatively independent judiciary
Government leader: Prime Minister Morarji Desai
Suffrage: universal over age 21
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Elections: national and state elections ordinarily held
every 5 years; may be postponed in emergency and may be
held more frequently if government loses confidence vote;
next general election due by March 1982; next state elections
staggered in 1982 and 1983
Political parties and leaders: Indian National Congress,
controlled national government from independence to
March 1977, and split in January 1978; larger Congress
group is headed by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi;
the smaller "official" Congress Party is headed by Swaran
Singh as provisional president; Janata Party (a merger of 5
pre-1977 election parties) led by Prime Minister Desai and
party president, Chandra Shekar; Communist Party of India
(CPI), C. Rajeswara Rao, general secretary; Communist
Party of India/Marxist (CPI/M), E. M. S. Namboodiripad,
general secretary; Communist Party of India /MarxistLenin-
ist (CPI/ML), Satyanarayan Singhh, general secretary; All-
India-Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (ADMK), a
regional party in Tamil Nadu led by M. G. Ramachandran;
Akali Dal representing Sikh religious community in the
Punjab
Voting strength (1977 election): 43.17% Janata and CFD,
34.54% Congress, 4.30% CPI/M, 2.82% CPI, 15.17% regional
parties and others
Communists: 90,000 members of CPI (est.), 85,000
members of CPI/M (est.); Communist sympathizers, 13
million
Other political or pressure groups: various separatist
groups seeking reorganization of states; numerous "senas" or
militant /chauvinistic organizations, including Shiv Sena and
Dalit Panthers in Bombay, the Anand Marg, and the
Rashtriya Swayamserak Sangh
Member of: ADB, AIOEC, Colombo Plan, Common-
wealth, FAO, G-77 GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA,
IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $77.3 billion (FY77 at current prices), $123 per
capita; real growth 5.0% in FY78, 1.6% in FY77
Agriculture: main crops-rice, other cereals, pulses,
oilseeds, cotton, jute, sugarcane, tobacco, tea, and coffee
Fishing: catch 2.3 million metric tons (1975); exports
$95.1 million (1974), imports $3.1 million (1974)
Major industries: textiles, food processing, steel, machin-
ery, transportation equipment, cement, jute manufactures
Crude steel: 8.12 million metric tons of ingots (FY77)
Electric power: 23,700,000 kW capacity (1977); 96 billion
kWh produced (1977), 150 kWh per capita
Exports: $5.8 billion (f.o.b., FY77); engineering goods,
textiles and clothing, tea
Imports: $5.7 billion (c.i.f., FY77); machinery and
transport equipment, petroleum, grains and flour, fertilizers
Major trade partners: U.S., U.K., U.S.S.R., Japan
Budget: (FY78) central government receipts, $12.8 billion;
expenditures, $13.5 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 2.1 rupees=US$1 (January
1978)
Fiscal year: fiscal year ends 31 March of stated year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 61,313 km total; 25,550 km meter gage (1.00
m), 30,041 km broad gage (1.676 m), 4,476 km narrow gage
(0.762 m and 0.610 m), government owned; 46 km meter
gage (1.00 m), 855 km broad gage (1.676 m), 345 km narrow
gage (0.762 m and 0.610 m), privately owned; 12,304 km
double track; 10,160 km electrified
Highways: 1,327,450 km total; 415,250 km paved,
190,600 km gravel or crushed stone, 304,900 km improved
earth, 416,700 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 14,300 km; 2,575 km navigable by
river steamers
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,552 km; refined products, 2,020
km; natural gas, 359 km
Ports: 9 major, 80 minor
Civil air: 93 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 358 total, 343 usable; 190 with permanent-
surface runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 54 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 123 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: fair domestic telephone service
where available, good internal microwave links; telegraph
facilities widespread; AM broadcast adequate; international
radio communications adequate; 2.1 million telephones (0.3
per 100 popl.); about 163 AM stations at 80 locations, 9 TV
stations, 4 earth satellite stations; submarine cables extend to
Sri Lanka
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 153,307,000;
90,220,000 fit for military service; about 7,132,000 reach
military age (17) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1979,
$3.6 billion; 16% of central government budget
INDONESIA
LAND
1,906,240 km2; 12% small holdings and estates, 64%
forests, 24% inland water, waste, urban, and other
Land boundaries: 2,736 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): under an archi-
pelago theory, claim is 12 nm, measured seaward from
straight baselines connecting the outermost islands
Coastline: 54,716 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 140,680,000, including East Timor and West
Irian (July 1978), average annual growth rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Indonesian(s); adjective-Indonesian
Ethnic divisions: 45% Javanese, 14% Sundanese, 7.5%
7.5% coastal Malays, 26% other
Religion: 85% Muslim, 9% Christian, 2% Buddhist, 2%
Hindu, 2% other
Language: Indonesian (modified form of Malay) official;
English, and Dutch leading foreign languages
Literacy: 60% (est.); 72% in 6-16 age group
Labor force: 44 million; 70% agriculture, 15% industry,
15% miscellaneous and unemployed
Organized labor: 10% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Indonesia
Type: republic
Capital: Jakarta
Political subdivisions: 27 first-level administrative subdi-
visions or provinces which are further subdivided into 282
second-level areas
Legal system: based on Roman-Dutch law, substantially
modified by indigenous concepts; constitution of 1945 is
legal basis of government; legal education at University of
Indonesia, Jakarta; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 17 August
Branches: executive headed by President who is chief of
state and head of cabinet; cabinet selected by President;
unicameral legislature (Parliament), of 460 members (100
appointed, 360 elected); second and larger body (Congress)
of 920 members and includes the legislature and 460 other
members (chosen by several processes, but not directly
elected) elects President and Vice President, and theoreti-
cally determines national policy
Government leader: President Suharto (reelected by
Congress, March 1978)
Suffrage: universal over age 17 and married persons
regardless of age
Political parties and leaders: Golkar (quasi-official
"party" based on functional groups), Amir Moertono;
Indonesian Democratic Party (federation of former Nation-
alist and Christian parties), Mohammed Isnaeni; Unity
Development Party (federation of former Islamic parties),
Idham Chalid
Voting strength (1977 election): Golkar 232 seats,
Indonesian Democratic 29, Unity Development 99
Communists: Communist Party (PKI) was officially
banned in March 1966; current strength est. at 1,000, with
less than 10% engaged in organized activity; pre-October
1965 hard-core membership has been estimated at 1.5
million
Member of: ADB, ANRPC, ASEAN, CIPEC, ESCAP,
FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, NAM, OPEC, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $43 billion (1977) about $300 per capita; real
average annual growth (1972-77), 7.5%
Agriculture: subsistence food production, and smallholder
and plantation production for export; main crops-rice,
rubber, copra, other tropical products; food shortage-rice,
wheat
Fishing: catch 1.5 million tons (1976); exports $150
million (1977), imports $8 million (1977)
Major industries: petroleum, agricultural processing,
textiles, mining
Electric power: 2,053,900 kW capacity (1977); 5.9 billion
kWh produced (1977), 40 kWh per capita
Exports: total $10.4 billion (f.o.b., 1977); petroleum ($7.1
billion; 530 million bbls), timber, coffee, rubber, tin, palm
oil, tea, pepper, tobacco
Imports: $6.4 billion (c.i.f., 1977); rice, wheat, textiles,
chemicals, iron and steel products, machinery, transport
equipment, consumer durables
Major trade partners: exports (1977)-40% Japan, 28%
U.S., 9% Singapore; imports-30% Japan, 14% U.S., 8% West
Germany
Aid: economic assistance commitments, 1970-76; Commu-
nist, $100 million; OPEC, $0; U.S., $1,597 million; other
Western, $3,817 million; bilateral military assistance com-
mitments, 1970-76: Communist, $1 million; U.S., $183
million
Budget: (1978-79) expenditures $11.6 billion; planned
receipts $9.6 billion domestic, $2.0 billion foreign
Monetary conversion rate: 415 rupiah=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
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COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 7,863 km total; 7,246 km 1.067-meter gage,
525 km 0.750-meter gage, 92 km 0.600-meter gage; 211 km
double track; 101 km electrified; government owned
Highways: 93,053 km total; 26,573 km paved, 41,521 km
gravel or crushed stone, 24,959 km improved or unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 21,579 km; Sumatra 5,471 km, Java
and Madura 820 km, Borneo 10,460 km, Celebes 241 km,
and Irian Barat 4,587 km
Ports: 10 major, 63 minor
Civil air: approximately 130 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 393 total, 367 usable; 66 with permanent-
surface runways; 11 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 66 with
runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: interisland microwave system and
IIF police net; domestic service poor, international service
good; radiobroadcast coverage good; 314,000 telephones (0.2
per 100 popl.); 291 AM, 1 FM, and 13 TV stations; I
international ground satellite station (1 Indian Ocean
antenna and 1 Pacific Ocean antenna), and 40 domestic
ground satellite stations
LAND
1,647,240 kmz; 14% agricultural, 11% forested, 16%
cultivable with adequate irrigation, 51% desert, waste, or
urban, 8% migratory grazing and other
Land boundaries: 5,318 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing, 50
nm)
Coastline: 3,180 km, including islands, 676 km
PEOPLE
Population: 35,286,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Iranian(s); adjective-Iranian
Ethnic divisions: 63% ethnic Persians, 3% Kurds, 13%
other Iranian, 18% Turkic, 3% Arab and other Semitic, 1%
other
Religion: 93% Shia Muslim; 5% Sunni Muslim; 2%
Zoroastrians, Jews, Christians and Baha'is
Language: Persian (Farsi), Turkish dialects, Kurdish,
Arabic
Literacy: about 37% of those 7 years of age and older
(1976 est.)
Labor force: 10.1 million est. 1976; 36% agriculture, 21%
manufacturing; shortage of skilled labor substantial
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Empire of Iran
Type: constitutional monarchy, controlled by the Shah
Capital: Tehran
Political subdivisions: 23 provinces, subdivided into
districts, sub-districts, counties, and villages
Legal system: based largely on French law, with elements
drawn from other continental systems; personal law based on
Islamic practice generally with residual traces of Roman
law; constitution adopted 1906 and constitutional law of
1907; High Court of Appeal may judge disputes relating to
government departments acting according to law; legal
education at University of Teheran; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Birthday of the Shah, 26 October
Branches: executive power rests in Shah who appoints a
Prime Minister; Prime Minister must be approved by lower
house (Majlis); while Cabinet theoretically responsibility of
Prime Minister, Shah usually exerts strong influence over its
selection; bicameral legislature; Majlis has 268 members
elected to 4-year terms, and Senate 60 members serving
4-year terms; half of Senate members appointed by Shah,
other half elected; no provision for judicial review of
constitutionality of legislative acts
Government leaders: Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and
Prime Minister Jamshid Amuzegar
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: Majlis every 4 years; Senate every 4 years;
latest national elections June 1975, last district and
municipal October 1976
Political parties and leaders: a single party system,
designated The Resurgence Party of the People of Iran
(RPPI) with Jamshid Amuzegar as Secretary-General, was
formed by Shah in March 1975; all other political parties
disbanded
Voting strength: all candidates government approved and
members of the RPPI
96
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Communists: 1,000-2,000 (hard-core, est.); sympathizers
(15,000-20,000 est.); mostly pro-U.S.S.R. but pro-Chinese
faction developing
Other political or pressure groups: Tudeh Party (Com-
munist, illegal); nationalist opposition coalition; Confeder-
ation of Iranian Students (illegal)
Member of: CENTO, Colombo Plan, FAO, G-77, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
IPU, ITU, OPEC, RCD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WFTU,
WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $81.2 billion (1977), $2,366 per capita; 1977 real
GNP growth, 3.2%
Agriculture: wheat, barley, rice, sugar beets, cotton, dates,
raisins, tea, tobacco, sheep, and goats
Major industries: crude oil production (2,080 million bbls
in 1977) and refining, textiles, cement and other building
materials, food processing (particularly sugar refining and
vegetable oil production), metal fabricating
Electric power: 6,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 19 billion
kWh produced (1977), 545 kWh per capita
Exports: $24.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 97% petroleum; also
carpets, raw cotton, fruits, and nuts, hide and leather items,
ores
Imports: $14.1 billion (f.o.b., 1977); machinery, iron and
steel products, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electrical equip-
ment, agricultural products
Major trade partners: exports-U.S., Japan, U.K., Neth-
erlands, West Germany, U.S.S.R. and other Communist
countries; imports-U.S., West Germany, Japan, U.K.,
U.S.S.R.
Budget: (FY78-79) $59.2 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 70.6 rials=US$l
Fiscal year: 21 March-20 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,601 km total; 4,509 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 92 km 1.676-meter gage
Highways: 43,442 km total; 12,060 km bituminous and
bituminous treated, 22,920 km gravel and crushed stone,
8,462 km improved earth
Inland waterways: 904 km, excluding the Caspian Sea,
104 km on the Shatt al Arab
Pipelines: crude oil, 3,072 km; refined products, 3,597
km; natural gas, 2,317 km
Ports: 7 major, 6 minor
Civil air: 57 major transport aircraft, including 7 leased in
and 1 leased out
Airfields: 181 total, 167 usable; 65 with permanent-
surface runways; 13 with runways over 3,660 m, 15 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 70 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: advanced system of high-capacity
radio-relay links, open-wire lines, cables, and tropospheric
links; principal center Tehran, secondary centers Isfahan,
Meshed, and Tabriz; 805,600 telephones (2.0 per 100 popl.);
35 AM, 2 FM, and 67 TV stations; I satellite station with
Atlantic Ocean and Indian Ocean antennas, extensive
upgrading in progress
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 8,084,000; 4,789,000 fit
for military service; about 350,000 reach military age (21)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 20 March 1979,
$9,933 million; 17% of central government budget
IRAQ
LAND
445,480 km'; 18% cultivated, 68% desert, waste, or urban,
10% seasonal and other grazing land, 4% forest and
woodland
Land boundaries: 3,668 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 58 km
PEOPLE
Population: 12,470,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Iraqi(s); adjective-Iraqi
Ethnic divisions: 70.9% Arabs, 18.3% Kurds, 0.7%
Assyrians, 2.4% Turkomans, 7.7% other
Religion: 90% Muslim (50% Shiah Muslim, 40% Sunni
Muslim), 8% Christian, 2% other
Language: Arabic, Kurdish minority speaks Kurdish
Literacy: 20% to 40%
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Labor force: 2.4 million; 70% agriculture, 6.5% industry,
6.7% government, 16.8% other; rural underemployment
high, but not serious because low subsistence levels make it
easy to care for unemployed; severe shortage of technically
trained personnel
Organized labor: 11% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Iraq
Type: republic; National Front Government consisting of
Ba'th Party (BPI), Iraq Communist Party (CPI), and pro-
administration Kurds formed in July 1973; Communists play
nominal role in government)
Capital: Baghdad
Political subdivisions: 18 provinces under centrally
appointed officials
Legal system: based on Islamic law in special religious
courts, civil law system elsewhere; provisional constitution
adopted in 1968; judicial review was suspended; legal
education at University of Baghdad; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 14 July
Branches: Ba'th Party of Iraq has been in power since
1968 coup
Government leaders: President Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr;
Deputy Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council
Saddam Husayn 'Abd-al-Majid al-Tikriti
Suffrage: no elective bodies exist
Elections: no national elections since overthrow of
monarchy in 1958
Communists: Communist Party allowed token representa-
tion in cabinet; est. 2,000 "hard-core members
Political or pressure groups: political parties banned,
possibly some opposition to regime from disaffected
members of the regime and army officers
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAPEC, OPEC,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $19 billion (1977 est.), $1,550 per capita
Agriculture: dates, wheat, barley, rice, livestock
Major industry: crude petroleum (third largest producer
in Middle East); 2.3 million b/d (1977); petroleum revenues
for 1977, $10.3 billion
Electric power: 1,200,000 kW capacity (1977); 5.6 billion
kWh produced (1977), 470 kWh per capita
Exports: $10.6 billion (f.o.b., 1977 est.); net receipts from
oil, $10.3 billion; non-oil, $300 million est.
Imports: $5.0 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 26% from Communist
countries (1973)
Major trade partners: exports-France, Italy, Brazil,
Japan, Turkey, U.K., U.S.S.R., other Communist countries;
imports-West Germany, Japan, France, U.S., U.K., U.S.S.R.
and other Communist countries (1977)
Budget: $25.7 billion (FY78), actual estimated
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Iraqi dinar=US$3.39 (end
of December 1977)
Fiscal year: 1 January-31 December
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,700 km total; 1,123 km standard gage (1.435
m), 577 km meter gage (1.00 m); 16 km meter gage double
track
Highways: 20,791 km total; 6,490 km paved, 4,645 km
improved earth, 9,656 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 1,015 km; Shatt al Arab navigable by
maritime traffic for about 104 km; Tigris and Euphrates
navigable by shallow-draft steamers
Ports: 3 major (Basra, Umm Qasr, Al Faw)
Pipelines: crude oil, 3,821 km; 585 km refined products;
1,360 km natural gas
Civil air: 26 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 75 total, 66 usable; 24 with permanent-surface
runways; 39 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 16 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: network consists of coaxial cables,
radio-relay links, and radiocommunication stations; 320,000
telephones (2.8 per 100 popl.); 9 AM, no FM and 10 TV
stations; 1 satellite station with Atlantic Ocean and Indian
Ocean antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,642,000; 1,478,000 fit
for military service; about 118,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: est. for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $1,660,000,000; 12% of central government budget
IRELAND
LAND
68,894 kmz; 17% arable, 51% meadows and pastures, 3%
forested, 2% inland water, 27% waste and urban
Land boundaries: 360 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 1,448 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,228,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Irishman(men), Irish (collective pl.);
adjective-Irish
Ethnic divisions: racially homogeneous Celts
Religion: 94% Roman Catholic, 4% Anglican, 2% other
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Language: English and Gaelic official; English is gen-
erally spoken
Literacy: 98%-99%
Labor force: about 1,143,000 (1976); 26% agriculture,
forestry, fishing; 19% manufacturing; 15% commerce; 7%
construction; 5% transportation; 4% government; 24% other;
9.8% unemployment (February 1976)
Organized labor: 36% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Ireland, Eire (Gaelic)
Type: republic
Capital: Dublin
Political subdivisions: 26 counties
Legal system: based on English common law, substan-
tially modified by indigenous concepts; constitution adopted
1937; judicial review of legislative acts in Supreme Court;
has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: St. Patrick's Day, 17 March
Branches: elected President; bicameral parliament re-
flecting proportional and vocational representation; judici-
ary appointed by President on advice of government
Government leaders: President Patrick Hillery; Prime
Minister (Taoiseach) John (Jack) Lynch; Deputy Prime
Minister (Tanaiste) George Colley
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: Dail (lower house) elected every 5 years-last
election June 1977; President elected for 7-year term-last
election November 1976
Political parties and leaders: Fianna Fail, John (Jack)
Lynch; Labor Party, Frank Cluskey; Fine Gael, Garret
Fitzgerald; Communist Party of Ireland, Michael O'Riordan
Voting strength: (1977 election) Fianna Fail (84 seats),
Fine Gael (43 seats), Labor Party (17 seats), independents
hold 4 seats
Communists: approximately 600
Member of: Council of Europe, EC, EEC, ESRO
(observer), EURATOM, FAO, GATT, IBRD, ICAO, ICES,
IDA, IEA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU,
IWC-International Wheat Council, OECD, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $9.3 billion prelim. est. (1977, at 1977 prices),
$2,913 per capita; 63.4% consumption, 25.9% investment,
18.8% government, 2.0% inventories; -10.2% net export of
goods and services; 1970-77 (inclusive) real growth rate,
average 3.1%
Agriculture: 70% of agricultural area used for permanent
hay and pasture; main products-livestock and dairy
products, turnips, barley, potatoes, sugar beets, wheat; 85%
self-sufficient; food shortages-grains, fruits, vegetables;
caloric intake 3,510 calories per day per capita (1970)
Fishing: catch 80,676 metric tons (1976); exports of fish
and fish products $37.3 million (1976), imports of fish and
fish products $15.7 million (1976)
Major industries: food products, brewing, textiles and
clothing, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, machinery and
transportation equipment
Shortages: coal, petroleum, timber and woodpulp, steel
and nonferrous metals, fertilizers, cereals and animal feeds,
textile fibers and textiles
Crude steel: 85,000 metric tons produced in 1975, 30 kg
per capita
Electric power: 2,387,000 kW capacity (1977); 9 billion
kWh produced (1977), 2,315 kWh per capita
Exports: $4,364 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); live animals,
meat, dairy products, textiles, clothing, chemicals,
machinery
Imports: $5,400 million (c.i.f., 1977 est.); petroleum and
petroleum products, machinery, chemicals, cereals, textiles
Major trade partners: 66% EC (42% U.K.); 8% U.S.
(January-November 1977)
Aid: economic-EC Common Borrowing Facility, $300
million (1976)
Budget: (1978 projected) 2,368 million pounds expendi-
tures, 1,963 million pounds revenues, 405 million pounds
deficit, public sector borrowing requirement 821 million
pounds
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Irish pound=US$1.7448
(1977) (annual average, floating)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,009 km 1.600-meter gage; 1,894 km govern-
ment-owned; 115 km privately-owned
Highways: 88,302 km total; 78,616 km surfaced, 9,686
km earth
Inland waterways: approximately 1,000 km
Ports: 6 major, 38 minor
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Civil air: 30 major transport aircraft (including 7 leased
out)
Airfields: 38 total, 38 usable; 8 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: small, modern system; all cities
interconnected for telephone and telegraph service; 480,000
telephones (15.1 per 100 pop].); 6 AM, 7 FM, and 28 TV
stations; 4 coaxial submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 739,000; 579,000 fit for
military service; about 29,000 reach military age (17)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1978,
$193.8 million; about 6% of the central government budget
NOTE: The Arab territories occupied since the 1967 war
are not included in the data below unless so indicated.
LAND
20,720 km2 (excluding about 64,750 km2 of occupied
territory in Jordan, Egypt, and Syria); 20% cultivated, 40%
pastureland and meadows, 4% forested, 4% desert, waste, or
urban, 3% inland water, 29% unsurveyed (mostly desert)
Land boundaries: 1,036 km (prior to 1967 war); including
occupied areas, approximately 1,050 km (1977)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm
Coastline: 273 km (prior to 1967 war); including occupied
areas, approximately 848 km (1977)
PEOPLE
Population: 3,654,000, excluding East Jerusalem and the
other occupied territories (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.3% (12-76 to 12-77)
Nationality: noun-Israeli(s); adjective-Israel
Ethnic divisions: 85% Jews, 15% non-Jews (mostly Arabs)
Religion: 85% Judaism, 11% Islam, 4% Christian and
other
Language: Hebrew official; Arabic used officially for
Arab minority; English most commonly used foreign
language
Literacy: 88% Jews, 48% Arabs
Labor force: 1,133,000; 6.5% agriculture, forestry and
fishing; 25.3% manufacturing (mining, industry); 0.9%
electricity and water; 8.1% construction and public works;
12.2% commerce; 7.7% transport, storage, and communica-
tions; 6.5% finance and business; 26.1% public services; 6.7%
personal and other services (1974)
Organized labor: 90% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Israel
Type: republic
Capital: Jerusalem; not recognized by U.S. which
maintains Embassy in Tel Aviv
Political subdivisions: 6 administrative districts
Legal system: mixture of English common law and, in
personal area, Jewish, Christian and Muslim legal systems;
commercial matters regulated substantially by codes
adopted since 1948; no formal constitution; some of the
functions of a constitution are filled by the Declaration of
Establishment (1948), the basic laws of the Knesset
(legislature) relating to the Knesset, Israeli lands, the
president, the government and the Israel citizenship law; no
judicial review of legislative acts; legal education at Hebrew
University in Jerusalem; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction,
with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 11 May
Branches: President Ephraim Katzir-has largely ceremo-
nial functions; executive power vested in cabinet; unicam-
eral parliament (Knesset) of 120 members elected under a
system of proportional representation; legislation provides
fundamental laws in absence of a written constitution; 2
distinct court systems (secular and religious)
Government leader: Prime Minister Menachem Begin
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: held every 4 years unless required by
dissolution of Knesset; last election held in May 1977
Principal political parties and leaders: Herut, Prime
Minister Menachem Begin, Defense Minister Ezer Weizman;
Liberal Party, Finance Minister Simcha Ehrlich; La'am,
Yigal Hurvitz; (Likud is a coalition formed of Herut,
Liberals and La'am); National Religious Party, Joseph Burg,
Zevulun Hammer; Democratic Movement for Change,Yi-
gael Yadin, Shmuel Tamir, Meir Amit; Israel Labor Party,
Shimon Peres, Yitzhak Rabin, Yigal Allon; SHELLI, Arieh
Eliav
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ISRAEL/ITALY
Voting strength: Likud 45 seats; National Religious Party
12 seats; Orthodox Augudat parties 5 seats; Samuel Flatto-
Sharon 1 seat; Moshe Dayan 1 seat; Labor Party-MAPAM-
Arab List Alignment 32 seats; Democratic Movement for
Change 15 seats; Independent Liberal Party 1 seat; Citizens
Rights Movement 1 seat; RAKAH 5 seats; SHELLI 2 seats
Communists: RAKAH (predominantly Arab but with
) has some 1,500 members; the Jewish
hi
d
p
ers
Jews in its lea
Communist Party, MAKI, is now part of Moked, which is a
far-left Zionist party
Other political or pressure groups: right-wing Jewish
Defense League led by Rabbi Meir Kahane; Black Panthers,
d fl, group seeking more benefits for
Ports: 3 major (Haifa, Ashdod, Elat), 5 minor
Airfields: 55 total, 46 usable; 20 with permanent-surface
runways; 5 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 7 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Civil air: 40 major transport aircraft (including 5 leased
in)
Telecommunications: most highly developed in the
Middle East though not the largest; 870,000 telephones (24.0
submarine cables; I Atlantic Ocand ean
per repeater potations; AM, 10 FM
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: Jewish males 15-49, 760,000;
655,000 fit for military service; average number of Jews
reaching military age (18) annually-30,000 males, 30,000
females; both sexes liable for military service
a loosely organize you
oriental Jews; Gush Emunim, Jewish religious zealots
pushing for freedom for Jews to settle anywhere on the West
Bank
Member of: FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITU, IWC-
International Wheat Council, OAS
International N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $12.8 billion (1977, in 1977 prices), $3,370 per
capita (converted to dollars at 10.50 Israeli pounds=US$1);
1977 growth of real GNP (1.0%
Agriculture: main products-citrus and other fruits,
vegetables, beef and dairy products, poultry products
Major industries: food processing, diamond m cutting
]tal products,
polishing, textiles and clothing,
transport equipment, electrical equipment, miscellaneous
machinery, rubber and plastic products, potash mining
Electric power: 2,500,000 kW capacity (1977); 13.5
billion kWh produced (1977), 3,720 kWh per capita
Exports: $34 billion (f.o.b., 1977); major items-polished
diamonds, citrus and other fruits, textiles and clothing,
processed foods, fertilizer and chemical products; tourism is
leading foreign exchange earner major items-military
Imports: $5.4 billion (f.o.b., 1977); miron and
equipment, rough diamonds, chemicals, machinery,
steel, cereals, textiles, vehicles, ships, and aircraft
Major trade partners: exports-EC, U.S., U.K., Japan,
Hong Kong, Switzerland; imports-EC, U.S., U.K., Switzer-
land, Japan
Budget: FY ending 31 March 1978-$10 billion (con-
verted at 18.5 Israeli pounds=US$1)
Monetary conversion rate: the Israeli pound was allowed
to float on 31 October 1977 and as of 3 November 1977 it
was roughly 15 Israeli pounds=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 767 km standard gage (1.435 m)
Highways: 4,348 km paved, 7 km gravel/crushed stone,
remainder unknown
Pipelines: crude oil, 708 km; refined products, 290 km;
natural gas, 89 km
ITALY
LAND
301,217 km'; 50% cultivated, 17% meadow and pasture,
21% forest, 3% unused but potentially productive, 9% waste
or urban
Land boundaries: 1,702 km
WATER 12 nm
Limits of territorial waters (claimed):
Coastline: 4,996 km
PEOPLE average annual
Population: 56,711,000 (July 1978),
growth rate 0.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Italian(s); adjective-Italian
Ethnic divisions: primarily Italian but population in-
cludes small clusters of German-, French-, and Slovene-Ital-
ians in the north and of Albanian-Italians in the south
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Religion: almost 100% nominally Roman Catholic (de
facto state religion)
Language: Italian; Parts of Trentino-Alto Adige Region
(e.g., Bolzano) are predominantly German speaking; signifi-
cant French-speaking minority in Valle d'Aosta Region;
Slovene-speaking minority in the Trieste-Gorizia area
Literacy: 5%-7% of population illiterate (1972); illiteracy
varies widely by region
Labor force: 19,549,000 (January 1975); 15.0% agricul-
ture, 42.9% industry, 39.0% other; 7% unemployment
(1978); 1.5 million Italians employed in other Western
European countries
Organized labor: 20% (est.) of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Italian Republic
Type: republic
Capital: Rome
Political subdivisions: constitution provides for establish-
ment of 20 regions; 5 (Sicilia, Sardegna, Trentino-Alto Adige,
Friuli-Venezia Giulia, and Valle d'Aosta) have been
functioning for some time and the remaining 15 regions
were instituted on 1 April 1972; 94 provinces
Legal system: based on civil law system, with ecclesiasti-
cal law influence; constitution came into effect 1 January
1948; judicial review under certain conditions in Constitu-
tional Court; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Anniversary of the Republic, 2 June
Branches: executive-President empowered to dissolve
Parliament and call national election; he is also Commander
of the Armed Forces and presides over the Supreme Defense
Council; otherwise, authority to govern invested in Council
of Ministers; legislative power invested in bicameral,
popularly elected Parliament; Italy has an independent
judicial establishment
Government leaders: President Giovanni Leone; Premier
Giulio Andreotti
Suffrage: universal over age 18 (except in Senatorial
elections where minimum age of voter is 25)
Elections: national elections for Parliament held every 5
years (most recent, June 1976); provincial and municipal
elections held every 5 years with some out of phase; regional
elections every 5 years (held June 1975)
Political parties and leaders: Christian Democratic Party
(DC), Benigno Zaccagnini (secretary general); Communist
Party (PCI), Enrico Berlinguer (secretary general), Luigi
Longo (party president); Socialist Party (PSI), Bettino Craxi
(secretary general), Pietro Nenni (party president); Social
Democratic Party (PSDI), Pierluigi Romita (secretary
general); Liberal Party (PLI), Valerio Zanone (party
secretary); Italian Social Movement (MSI), Giorgio Almir-
ante; Republican Party (PRI), Oddo Biasini (party secre-
tary); Ugo La Malfa (party president)
Voting strength (1976 election): 38.7% DC, 34.4% PCI,
oth9.6%erPSI, 6.1% MSI, 3.4% PSDI, 3.1% PRI, 1.3% PLI, 3.4%
Communists: 1,814,740 members (February 1978)
Other political or pressure groups: the Vatican; three
major trade union confederations (CGIL-Communist
dominated, CISL-Christian Democratic, and UIL-Social
Democratic, Socialist, and Republican); Italian manufactur-
ers association (Confindustria); organized farm groups
Member of: ADB, ASSIMER, Council of Europe, DAC,
EC, ECOWAS, ECSC, EEC, EIB, ELDO, ESRO,
EURATOM, FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA,
IEA, TFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study
Group, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITU, NATO, OAS
(observer), OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WEU, WHO,
WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GDP: $171 billion (1976), $3,040 per capita; 65.5%
private consumption, 20.2% gross fixed investment, 13.9%
government, 3,2% inventory change, net foreign balance
-2.8%, 1973 growth rate 6.3%, 1974 growth rate 3.4%, 1976
growth rate 5.6% (1970 constant prices)
Agriculture: important producer of fruits and vegetables;
main crops-cereals, potatoes, olives; 95% self-sufficient;
food shortages-fats, meat, fish, and eggs; daily caloric
intake, 3,335 calories per capita (1974)
Fishing: catch 376,509 metric tons (1975), $336 million
(1973); exports $46 million (1976), imports $352 million
(1976)
Major industries: machinery and transportation equip-
ment, iron and steel, chemicals, food processing, textiles
Shortages: coal, fuels, minerals
Crude steel: 23.3 million metric tons produced (1976),
418 kg per capita
Electric power: 45,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 163.6
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,875 kWh per capita
Exports: $44.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
machinery and transport equipment, textiles, foodstuffs,
chemicals, footwear
Imports: $46.5 billion (c.i.f., 1977); principal items-
machinery and transport equipment, foodstuffs, ferrous and
nonferrous metals, wool, cotton, petroleum
Major trade partners: (1977) 48.5% EC-nine (20% West
Germany, 16% France, 5% U.K., 4% Netherlands, 3%
Belgium-Luxembourg); 7% U.S.; 3% U.S.S.R. and 2% other
Communist countries of Eastern Europe
Aid: donor-bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $4,991 million (1970-76)
Monetary conversion rate: Smithsonian rate as of
December 1973, 650.4 lira=US$1; average of Friday closing
rates in 1977-882 lira=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
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ITALY/IVORY COAST
COMMUNICATIONS
government-
Railroads: 20,690 km total; km electrified; 4,720
owned standard gage (1.435 m), 7,850
km non-government owned, 2,507 km standard gage (1.435
m), 1,270 km electrified; 2,213 km narrow gage (0.950 m),
517 km electrified
Highways: 286,400 km total; autostrade 4,800 km, state
highways 41,200 km, provincial highways 91,200 km,
communal highways 149,200 km; 254,400 km concrete,
bituminous, or stone block, 24,800 km gravel and crushed
stone, 7,200 km earth
Inland waterways: 2,500 km navigable routes
Pipelines: crude oil, 1,770 km; refined products, 2,179
km; natural gas, 13,079 km
Ports: 16 major, 22 significant minor
Civil air: 130 major transport aircraft, including 7 leased
in
Airfields: 151 total, 151 usable; 81 with permanent-
surface runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 28 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 44 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 10
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: well engineered, well constructed,
and efficiently operated; 15.2 million telephones (27.1 per
100 popl.); 135 AM, 660 FM, and 900 TV stations; 14 coaxial
submarine cables; 2 communication satellite ground stations
with Atlantic Ocean antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 13,986,000; 11,719,000
fit for military service; 442,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $5,018.8 million; about 8% of proposed
central government budget
IVORY COAST
LAND
323,750 km2; 40% forest and woodland, 8% cultivated,
52% grazing, fallow, and waste, 200 mi. of lagoons and
connecting canals along eastern coast
Land boundaries: 3,227 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 515 km
PEOPLE
Population: 7,266,000, resident African population only,
(July 1978), average annual growth rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Ivorian(s); adjective-Ivorian
Ethnic divisions: 7 major indigenous ethnic groups; no
single tribe more than 20% of population; most important
are Agni, Baoule, Krou, Senoufou, Mandingo; approximately
2 million foreign Africans, mostly Upper Voltans; about 75-
90 non-Africans (50-60 French) and 25,000-30,000
Lebanese)
Religion: 66% animist, 22% Muslim, 12% Christian
Language: French official, over 60 native dialects, Dioula
most widely spoken
Literacy: about 65% at primary school level
Labor force: over 85% of population engaged in
agriculture, forestry, livestock raising; about 11% of labor
force are wage earners, nearly half in agriculture, remainder
in government, industry, commerce, and professions
Organized labor: 20% of wage labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of the Ivory Coast
Type: republic, one-party presidential regime established
1960
Capital: Abidjan
Political subdivisions: 24 departments subdivided into
127 subprefectures
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1960; judicial review in
the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court; legal
education at Abidjan School of Law; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 7 December
Branches: President has sweeping powers, unicameral
legislature, separate judiciary
Government leader: President Felix Houphouet-Boigny
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: uncontested Presidential and legislative elec-
tions held in November 1975 for 5-year term
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IVORY COAST/JAMAICA
Political parties and leaders: Parti Democratique de la
Cote d`Ivoire (PDCI), (only party); official party leader is
Secretary General Philippe Yace, but Houphouet-Boigny is
in control
Communists: no Communist party; possibly some
sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, CEAO, EAMA, ECA, ECOWAS, E113
(associate), Entente, FAO, C-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, Niger River
Commission, NAM, OAU, OCAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $4.4 billion (1976 est.), $840 capita; average annual
growth rate in constant prices, 8% (1970-76)
Agriculture: commercial-coffee, cocoa, wood, bananas,
pineapples, palm oil; food crops-corn, millet, yams, rice;
other commodities-cotton, rubber, tobacco, fish; self-
sufficient in most foodstuffs, but rice, sugar, and meat
imported
Fishing: catch 63,470 metric tons (1975); exports $12.8
million (1975), imports $33.6 million (1975)
Major industries: food and lumber processing, oil
refinery, automobile assembly plant, textiles, soap, flour
mill, matches, three small shipyards, fertilizer plant, and
battery factory
Electric power: 525,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 165 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.6 billion (f.o.b., 1976); coffee, tropical woods,
cocoa, 70% of total; bananas, pineapples, palm oil
Imports: $1.3 billion (c.i.f., 1976); about 40% consumer
goods, 10% raw materials and fuels, about 50% manufac-
tured goods and semi-finished products
Major trade partners: France and other EC countries
about 65%, U.S. 13%, Communist countries about 1 %
Aid: economic-France (1960-69), $312 million; EC
through FY75, $203.2 million; U.S. (FY61-75), $40.7 million;
others (1960
-71), $76 million, including $18.5 million
committed; no Communist aid programs; military- non-
Communist countries (1954-67), $7.3 million
Budget: 1977, proposed-revenues $705 million, current
expenditures $389 million, investment expenditures $316
million
Ports: 2 major (Abidjan, San Pedro), 3 minor
Civil air: 18 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 50 total, 48 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 8 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: system only slightly above African
average; consists of open-wire lines and radio relay links,
which provide incomplete coverage of country; Abidjan is
only center; 58,700 telephones (0.9 per 100 pop].); 2 AM, 4
FM, and 6 TV stations; I Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,579,000; 820,000 fit
for military service; 55,000 males reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $78,153,621; about 5.2% of total operating budget
JAMAICA
LAND
11,422 km2; 21% arable, 23% meadows and pastures, 19%
forested, 37% waste, urban, or other
Monetary conversion rate: about 242.69 Communaute WATER
of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Financiere Africaine francs=US$1 November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 657 km of the 1,173 km Abidjan to Ouagadou-
gou, Upper Volta line, all single track meter gage (1.00 m);
only diesel locomotives in use
Highways: 46,675 km total; 2,388 km bituminous and
bituminous-surface treatment; 33,097 km gravel, crushed
stone, laterite, and improved earth; 1],090 km unimproved
Inland waterways: 740 km navigable rivers and numer-
ous coastal lagoons
PEOPLE
Population: 2,201,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Jamaican(s); adjective-Jamaican
Ethnic divisions: African 76.3%, Afro-European 15.1%,
Chinese and Afro-Chinese 1.2%, East Indian and Afro-East
Indian 3.4%, white 3.2%, other 0.9%
Religion: predominantly Protestant, some Roman Catho-
lic, some spiritualist cults
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Language: English
Literacy: government claims 82%, but probably only
about one-half of that number are functionally literate
Labor force: 672,000 (1975); 29% in agriculture, forestry,
fishing and mining, 12% manufacturing/mining, 8% public
administration, 5% construction, 10% commerce, 3% trans-
portation and utilities, 33% services; 25% unemployed;
shortage of technical and managerial personnel
Organized labor: about 25% of labor force (1966)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Jamaica
Type: independent state within Commonwealth since
August 1962, recognizing Elizabeth II as head of state
Capital: Kingston
Political subdivisions: 12 parishes and the Kingston-St.
Andrew corporate area
Legal system: based on English common law; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 7 August
Branches: cabinet headed by Prime Minister; 60-member
elected House of Representatives; 21-member Senate (13
nominated by the Prime Minister, 8 by opposition leader);
judiciary follows British tradition under a Chief Justice
Government leader: Prime Minister Michael Manley
Suffrage: universal, age 18 and over
Elections: at discretion of Governor-General upon advice
of Prime Minister but within 5 years; latest held 15
December 1976
Political parties and leaders: People's National Party
(PNP), Michael Manley; Jamaica Labor Party (JLP),
Edward Seaga
Voting strength: (1976 general elections) 56.8% PNP,
43.2% JLP
Communists: a few hundred Marxist and Communist
sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: New World Group
(Caribbean regionalists, nationalists, and leftist intellectual
fraternity); Rastafarians (Negro religious/ racial cultists,
pan-Africanists); New Creation International Peacemakers
Tabernacle (leftist group); Workers Liberation League (a
Marxist coalition of students/labor)
Member of: CARICOM, FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB,
IAEA, IBA, IBRD, ICAO, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU,
NAM, OAS, Pan American Health Organization, SELA,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $3,045 million (1976), $1,440 per capita; real
growth rate 1976, -6.9%
Agriculture: main crops-sugarcane, citrus fruits, ba-
nanas, pimento, coconuts, coffee, cocoa
Major industries: bauxite mining, textiles, food process-
ing, light manufactures, tourism
Electric power: 850,000 kW capacity (1977); 2.6 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,220 kWh hr. per capita
Exports: $605 million (f.o.b., 1976); alumina, bauxite,
sugar, bananas, citrus fruits and fruit products, rum, cocoa
Imports: $991 million (c.i.f., 1976); fuels, machinery,
transportation and electrical equipment, food, fertilizer
Major trade partners: exports-U.S. 38%, U.K. 23%,
Norway 11%, Canada 4%; imports-U.S. 37%, U.K. 13%,
Canada 5% (1975)
Aid: economic-authorization from U.S. (FY56-76), $48
million in loans, $60 million in grants; from other Western
countries (1960-74), $151 million; from international organi-
zations (FY46-76), $232 million; military-authorizations
from U.S. (FY63-76), $1 million in grants
Budget: FY76-77-revenue $667 million, expenditure
$1,243 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Jamaican dollar=US$0.95
(Basic rate); 1 Jamaican dollar=US$0.74 (Special rate)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 330 km, all standard gage (1.435 m), single
track
Highways: 11,250 km total; 7,600 km paved, 2,150 km
gravel, 1,500 km improved earth
Pipelines: refined products, 10 km
Ports: 3 major (Kingston, Montego Bay, Montego Free-
port), 10 minor
Civil air: 13 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased in
and 3 leased out
Airfields: 42 total, 22 usable; 12 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 m; 3 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: fully automatic domestic telephone
network with 109,000 telephones (5.4 per 100 popl. ); 1
Atlantic Ocean satellite station; 8 AM, 1.1 FM, and 9 TV
stations; 3 coaxial submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 450,000; 320,000 fit for
military service; no conscription; average number currently
reaching minimum volunteer age (18) 25,000
Supply: dependent on U.K. and U.S.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1977,
$29.5 million; about 2.2% of central government budget
JAPAN
LAND
370,370 km2; 16% arable and cultivated, 3% grassland,
12% urban and waste, 69% forested
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 12,075 km Japan; 1,610 km Ryukyus
PEOPLE
Population: 114,983,000, including Ryukyus (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 1.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Japanese (sing., pl.); adjective-
Japanese
Ethnic divisions: 99.2% Japanese, 0.8% other (mostly
Korean)
Religion: most Japanese observe both Shinto and Buddhist
rites; about 16% belong to other faiths, including 0.8%
Christian
Language: Japanese
Literacy: 97.8% of those 15 years old and above (1960
data)
Labor force (1977 figures): 54.5 million; 11% agriculture,
forestry, and fishing; 34% manufacturing, mining, and
construction; 48% trade and services; 5% government; 2.0%
unemployed
Organized labor: 33.7% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Japan
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Tokyo
Political subdivisions: 47 prefectures (Ryukyus became
47th prefecture on 15 May 1972)
Legal system: civil law system with English-American
influence; constitution promulgated in 1946; judicial review
of legislative acts in the Supreme Court; accepts compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Birthday of the Emperor, 29 April
Branches: Emperor is merely symbol of state; executive
power is vested in cabinet dominated by the Prime Minister,
chosen by the Lower House of the bicameral, elective
legislature (Diet); judiciary is independent
Government leader: Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: general elections held every 4 years or upon
dissolution of Lower House, triennially for one-half of
Upper House
Political parties and leaders: Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP), T. Fukuda, President; Japan Socialist Party (JSP),
1. Asukata, Chairman; Democratic Socialist Party (DSP),
R. Sasaki, Chairman; Japan Communist Party (JCP), K.
Miyamoto, Presidium Chairman; Komeito (CGP), Y.
Takeiri, Chairman; New Liberal Club (NLC), Y. Kono;
United Social Democratic Party (USD)
Voting strength (1977 electir.-n): 37.6% LDP, 21.6% JSP,
10.2% CGP, 9.6% JCP, 5.6% DSP, 4.8% NLC, minor parties,
6.1% independents
Communists: 350,000; 3,000,000 sympathizers
Member of: ADS, ASPAC, Colombo Plan, DAC, ESCAP,
FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IEA, IFC,
IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, IRC, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-International
Whaling Commission, IWC-International Wheat Council,
OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $685 billion (1977, at 268.2 yen=US$1); $5,980 per
capita (1976); 53% personal consumption, 33% investment,
9% government current expenditure; real growth rate 5.2%
(1977); average annual growth rate (1974-76), 2.4%
Agriculture: land intensively cultivated-rice, sugar,
vegetables, fruits; 72% self-sufficient in food (1974); food
shortages-meat, wheat, feed grains, edible oil and fats;
caloric intake, 2,502 calories per day per capita (1974)
Fishing: catch 10.5 million metric tons (1975)
Major industries: metallurgical and engineering indus-
tries, electrical and electronic industries, textiles, chemicals
Shortages: fossil fuels, most industrial raw materials
Crude steel: 102 million metric tons produced (1977)
Electric power: 123,682,000 kW capacity (1977); 537
billion kWh produced (1977), 4,685 kWh per capita
Exports: $79.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 63% machinery and
equipment, 18% metals and metal products, 6% textiles
Imports: $61.8 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 44% fossil fuels, 7%
metals and metal products, 14% foodstuffs, 7% machinery
and equipment
Major trade partners: exports-25% U.S., 6% Communist
countries, 11% EC, 3% Australia, 41% other; imports-18%
U.S., 8% Australia, 6% EC, 5% Communist countries
Aid: Japanese official foreign economic aid disbursements
1975, $1,148 million
Budget: revenues $105.9 billion, expenditures $155.9
billion, deficit $49.9 billion (general account for fiscal year
ending March 1979)
Monetary conversion rate: 268.2 yen=US$1 (1977
average rate), floating since February 1973
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
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COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 28,912 km total; 1,077 km standard gage (1.435
m), 27,835 km predominantly narrow gage (1.067 m), 6,195
km double track, 7,376 km or 26% of total route length
electrified; 73% government-owned
Highways: 1,067,643 km total (1977); 338,343 km paved,
most of remainder gravel or crushed stone
Inland waterways: approx. 1,770 km; seagoing craft ply
all coastal "inland seas"
Pipelines: crude oil, 109 km; natural gas, 1,847 km
Ports: 53 major, over 2,000 minor
Civil air: 224 major transport aircraft (includes 2 leased)
Airfields: 183 total, 177 usable; 119 with permanent-
surface runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m; 22 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 44 with runways 1,220-2,439 m, 5
seaplane stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 31,668,000; 26,654,000
fit for military service; about 815,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Supply: defense industry potential is large, with capability
of producing the most sophisticated equipment; manufac-
tured equipment includes small arms artillery, armored
vehicles, and other types of ground forces materiel, aircraft
(jet and prop), naval vessels (submarines, guided missile and
other destroyers, patrol craft, mine warfare ships, and other
minor craft including amphibious, auxiliaries, service craft,
and small support ships), small amounts of all types of army
materiel
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1979,
$7.9 billion proposed; about 5.5% of total budget
JORDAN
NOTE: The war between Israel and the Arab states in
June 1967 ended with Israel in control of West Jordan.
Although approximately 930,000 persons resided in this area
prior to the start of the war, fewer than 750,000 of them
remain there under the Israeli occupation, the remainder
having fled to East Jordan. Over 14,000 of those who fled
were repatriated in August 1967, but their return has been
more than offset by other Arabs who have crossed and are
continuing to cross from West to East Jordan. These and
certain other effects of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war are not
included in the data below.
LAND
96,089 km2 (including about 5,439 km2 occupied by
Israel); 11% agricultural, 88% desert, waste, or urban, 1%
forested
Land boundaries: 1,770 km (1967, 1,668 km excluding
occupied areas)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 26 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,960,000, including West Bank and East
Jerusalem (July 1978), average annual growth rate 3.2% (7-
70 to 7-76); East Bank, 2,183,000, average annual growth
rate 3.6% (7-70 to 7-76); West Bank, including East
Jerusalem, 777,000, average annual growth rate 1.9% (1-71
to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Jordanian(s); adjective-Jordanian
Ethnic divisions: 98% Arab, 1% Circassian, 1% Armenian
Religion: 90%-92% Sunni Muslim, 8%-10% Christian
Language: Arabic official, English widely understood
among upper and middle classes
Literacy: about 50%-55% in East Jordan; somewhat less
than 60% in West Jordan
Labor force: 638,000; less than 5% unemployed
Organized labor: 9.8% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: `Amman
Political subdivisions: 8 governorates (3 are under Israeli
occupation) under centrally appointed officials
Legal system: based on Islamic law and French codes;
constitution adopted 1952; judicial review of legislative acts
in a specially provided High Tribunal; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 May
Branches: King holds balance of power; Prime Minister
exercises executive authority in name of King; Cabinet
appointed by King and responsible to parliament; bicameral
parliament with House of Representatives last chosen by
national elections in April 1967, and dissolved by King in
February 1976; Senate last appointed by King in November
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1974; met briefly in February 1976 to amend constitution
allowing King to postpone elections; present parliament
subservient to executive; secular court system based on
differing legal systems of the former Transjordan and
Palestine; law Western in concept and structure; Sharia
(religious) courts for Muslims, and religious community
council courts for non-Muslim communities; desert police
carry out quasi-judicial functions in desert areas
Government leader: King Husayn ibn Talal al-Hashimi
Suffrage: all citizens over age 20
Political parties and leaders: political party activity
illegal since 1957; Palestine Liberation Organization and
various smaller fedayeen groups clandestinely active on
West Bank; Muslim Brotherhood
Communists: party actively repressed, membership esti-
mated at less than 500
Member of. Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $1.65 billion (East Bank only, 1976), $760 per
capita; real growth rate (1973-76), 14%
Agriculture: main crops-wheat, fruits, vegetables, olive
oil; not self-sufficient in many foodstuffs
Major industries: phosphate mining, petroleum refining,
and cement production, light manufacturing
Electric power: 170,000 kW capacity (1977); 360 million
kWh produced (1977), 120 kWh per capita, East Bank only
Exports: $253 million (f.o.b., 1977); fruits and vegetables,
phosphate rock; Communist share 11% of total (1976)
Imports:-$1,321 million (c.i.f., 1977); petroleum products,
textiles, capital goods, motor vehicles, foodstuffs; Communist
share 7% of total (1976)
Aid: economic-U.S., $1,048 million economic assistance
(FY46-76), of which $16 million loans, $932 million grants;
military-$552 million total from U.S. (FY53-76) including
$324 million in MAP grants
Budget: (1977 est.)-expenditures $1,005 million (non-
military, $800 million, military $205 million), development
$412 million; deficit $45 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Jordanian dinar=US$3.03,
freely convertible; 0.3300 Jordanian dinar=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 817 km 1.050-meter gage, single track
Highways: 6,677 km paved; 2,413 km improved earth;
others unknown
Pipelines: crude oil, 209 km
Ports: 1 major (Aqaba)
Civil air: 14 major transport aircraft (including 3 leased
in)
Airfields: 25 total, 16 usable; 14 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways over 3,660 m, 10 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: adequate telecommunication sys-
tem for the needs of the country; 44,000 telephones (1.6 per
100 popl.); 5 AM, no FM and 6 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 624,000; 444,000 fit for
military service; average number currently reaching military
age (18) annually 32,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $246 million; 29% of central government budget
LAND
582,750 km2; about 21% forest and woodland, 13%
suitable for agriculture, 66% mainly grassland adequate for
grazing (1971)
Land boundaries: 3,368 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 536 km
PEOPLE
Population: 14,837,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.5% (7-71 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Kenyan(s); adjective-Kenyan
Ethnic divisions: 97% native African (including Bantu,
Nilotic, Hamitic and Nilo-Hamitic); 2% Asian; 1% Europe-
an, Arab and others
Religion: 56% Christian, 36% animist, 7% Muslim, 1%
Hindu
Language: English and Swahili official; each tribe has
own language
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July 1978
KENYA/KOREA, NORTH
Literacy: 27%
Labor force: 2.5 million; about 977,000, (39%) in
monetary economy (1967)
Organized labor: about 215,000
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Kenya
Type: republic within Commonwealth since December
1963
Capital: Nairobi
Political subdivisions: 7 provinces plus Nairobi Area
Legal system: based on English common law, tribal law
and Islamic law; constitution enacted 1963; judicial review
in Supreme Court; legal education at University Kenya
School of Law in Nairobi; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdic-
tion, with reservations
National holiday: 12 December
Branches: President and Cabinet responsible to unicam-
eral legislature (National Assembly) of 170 seats, 158 directly
elected by constituencies and 12 appointed by the President;
Assembly must be reelected at least every 5 years; High
Court, with Chief Justice and at least 11 justices, has
unlimited original jurisdiction to hear and determine any
civil or criminal proceeding; provision for systems of courts
of appeal
Government leader: President Jomo Kenyatta
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: general election (October 1974) elected present
National Assembly; next elections due 1979
Political party and leaders: Kenya Africa National Union
(KANU), president, Jomo Kenyatta
Voting strength: KANU holds all seats in the National
Assembly
Communists: may be a few Communists and sym-
pathizers
Other political or pressure groups: labor unions
Member of: AFDB, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, IWC-International
Wheat Council, NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO
Exports: $720 million (f.o.b., 1976 est.); coffee, tea,
livestock products, pyrethrum, soda ash, wattle-bark tanning
extract
Imports: $974 million (c.i.f., 1976 est.); machinery,
transport equipment, crude oil, paper and paper products,
iron and steel products, and textiles
Major trade partners: U.K. and EC, Uganda, Tanzania
Budget: FY77 current revenues $780 million; current
expenditures $680 million; development expenditures $295
million
Monetary conversion rate: 8.4 Kenya shillings=US$l
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,040 km meter gage (1.00 M)
Highways: 50,290 km total; 3,750 km paved, 12,160 km
gravel and/or earth; 26,880 km improved earth and 7,500
km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: part of Lake Victoria and Lake
Rudolph systems are' within boundaries of Kenya
Pipelines: refined products, 483 km
Ports: 1 major (Mombasa), 3 minor
Civil air: 20 major transport aircraft (including 5 leased
in)
Airfields: 238 total, 221 usable; 8 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 3 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 41 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: in top group of African systems;
consists of radio-relay links, open-wire lines, and radiocom-
munication stations; principal center Nairobi, secondary
centers Mombasa and Nakuru; 132,000 telephones (1.0 per
100 popl.); 4 AM, 2 FM, and 5 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,116,000; 1,913,000 fit
for military service; no conscription
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$79,968,647; about 5.8% of central government budget
KOREA, NORTH
ECONOMY
GDP: $3,200 million at current prices (est. 1976), $225 per
capita; 5% real growth 1970-76
Agriculture: main cash crops-coffee, sisal, tea, pyre-
thrum, cotton, livestock; food crops-corn, wheat, rice,
cassava; largely self-sufficient in food
Fishing: 33,800 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: small-scale consumer goods (plastic,
furniture, batteries, textiles, soap, agricultural processing,
cigarettes, flour), oil refining, cement billion
Electric power: 420,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.3
kWh produced (1977), 90 kWh per capita
LAND
121,730 km'; 17% arable and cultivated, 74% in forest,
scrub, and brush; remainder wasteland and urban
Land boundaries: 1,675 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (economic
200 nm, military 50 nm)
Coastline: 2,495 km
PEOPLE annual
Population: 18,134,000 (July 1978), average
growth rate 3.2% (current)
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KOREA, NORTH/KOREA, SOUTH
Nationality: noun-Korean(s); adjective-Korean
Ethnic divisions: racially homogeneous
Religion: Buddhism and Confucianism; religious activities
now almost nonexistent
Language: Korean
Literacy: 90% (est.)
Labor force: 6.1 million; 48% agriculture, 52% non-agri-
cultural; shortage of skilled and unskilled labor
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Type: Communist state; one-man rule
Capital: P'yongyang
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces, 2 special cities
(P'yongyang and Kaesong)
Legal system: based on German civil law system with
Japanese influences and Communist legal theory; constitu-
tion adopted 1948 and revised 1972; no judicial review of
legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 9 September
Branches: Supreme Peoples Assembly theoretically super-
vises Legislative and Judicial function; State Administration
Council (cabinet) oversees ministerial operations
Government and party leaders: Kim 11-song, President
DPRK, and General Secretary of the Korean Workers Party;
Yi Chong-ok, Premier
Suffrage: universal at age 17
Elections: election to SPA every 4 years, but this
constitutional provision not necessarily followed-last elec-
tion November 1977
Political party: Korean Workers (Communist) Party;
claimed membership of about 2 million, or about 11% of
population
Member of: IAEA, ICAO, IPU, IRCS, U.N. (observer
status only), UNCTAD, UNESCO, WHO WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $10.0 billion (1976), $590 per capita (in 1975
dollars)
Agriculture: main crops-corn, rice, vegetables; food
shortages-meat, cooking oils; production of foodstuffs
adequate for domestic needs at low levels of consumption
Major industries: machine building, electric power,
chemicals, mining, metallurgy, textiles, food processing
Shortages: complex machinery and equipment, coking
coal, petroleum
Crude steel: 2.8 million metric tons produced (1976), 106
kg per capita
Electric power: 4,150,000 kW capacity (1977); 24 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,345 kWh per capita
Exports: $555 million; minerals, chemical and metallurgi-
cal products (1976)
Imports: $825 million; machinery and equipment, petro-
leum, foodstuffs, coking coal (1976)
Major trade partners: total trade turnover $1.4 billion;
40% with non-Communist countries, 60% with Communist
countries (1976)
Aid: economic and military aid from the U.S.S.R. and
China
Monetary conversion rate: 1.94 won=US$1, non-com-
mercial rate
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,535 km total operating in 19(76;632,820; km
standard gage (1.435 m), 665 km narrow gage 0.7259
km double tracked; about 1,140 km electrified; govern-
ment-owned
Highways: about 20,280 km; 98.5% gravel, crushed stone,
or earth surface; 1.5% concrete or bituminous
Inland waterways: 2,253 km; mostly navigable by small
craft only
Ports: 6 major, 26 minor
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,905,000; 2,392,000 fit
for military service; 192,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: announced for fiscal year ending 31
December 1977, $1.05 billion; about 15.4% of total
government budget
KOREA, SOUTH
LAND
98,400 kmz; 23% arable (22% cultivated), 10% urban and
other, 67% forested
Land boundaries: 241 km
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 12 nm
Coastline: 2,413 km
PEOPLE
Population: 38,869,000 (July
growth rate 1.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Korean(s); adjective-Korean
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous; small Chinese minority
(approx. 20,000)
Religion: strong Confucian tradition; pervasive folk
religion (Shamanism); vigorous Christian minority (16.6%
Christian population); Buddhism (including estimated
20,000 members of Soka Gakkai); Chondokyo (religion of
the heavenly way), eclectic religion with nationalist over-
tones founded in 19th century, claims about 1.5 million
adherents
Language: Korean
Literacy: about 90%
Labor force: about 12.6 million (1976); 45% agriculture,
fishing, forestry; 22% mining and
services and other
Organized labor:
force
Government leaders: President Pak Chong-hui; Prime
Minister Choe Kyu-ha
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: presidential every 6 years indirectly by the
National Conference of Unification, last election May 1978;
two-thirds of the 219-member National Assembly is elected
directly for the same period within six months of the
presidential election, remaining third nominated by the
President and elected by the National Conference for a
three-year term; last election February 1973, Revitalization
Group-73 seats, Democratic Republican Party-68 seats,
New Democratic Party-55 seats, Democratic Unification
Party-3 seats, Independents-15 seats
Political parties and leaders: pro-government-Revital-
ization Group (appointed) (Chairman, Pack Tu-Chin) and
Democratic Republican Party (Acting Chairman, Yi
Hyo-sang); New Democratic Party (Chairman, Yi Chol-
sung); Democratic Unification (Chairman, Yang 11-tong)
Voting strength: (1973 election) popular vote 11,896,484;
DRP 38.8%, NDP 32.8%, DUP 10.2%, Independent 18.1%,
0.1% invalid
Communists: Communist activity banned by govern-
ment; an estimated 37,000-50,000 former members and
supporters
Other political or pressure groups: Federation of Korean
Trade Unions; Korean Veterans' Association; Korean Nation-
al Christian Council; large potentially volatile student
population concentrated in Seoul
Member of: ADB, Asian Parliamentary Union, Asian
People's Anti-Communist League (APACL), ASPAC,
Colombo Plan, ESCAP, FAO, G-77, GATT, Geneva
Conventions of 1949 for the protection of war victims,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO, IMCO, IMF,
INTELSAT, INTERPOL, IPU, ITU, IWC-International
Wheat Council, UNESCO, U.N. Special Fund, UPU, WHO,
WMO, World Anti-Communist League (WACL); official
observer at U.N., does not hold U.N. membership
ECONOMY
GNP: $31.5 billion (1977, in 1977 prices), $864 per capita;
real growth 10.3% (1977); real growth 11.7% (1972-77
average)
Agriculture: 40% of the population live on the land, but
agriculture, forestry and fishery constitute 24% of GNP;
main crops-rice, barley; not self-sufficient; food short-
ages-wheat, dairy products, corn
Fishing: catch 2,406,896 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: textiles and clothing, food processing,
chemical fertilizers, chemicals, plywood, steel, electronics
Shortages: base metals, petroleum, lumber and certain
food grains
Electric power: 6,500,000 kW capacity (1977); 27.2
billion kWh produced (1977), 735 kWh per capita
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Korea
Type: republic; power centralized in a strong executive
Capital: Seoul
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces, 2 special cities; heads
centrally appointed
Legal system: combines elements of continental Europe-
an civil law systems, Anglo-American law, and Chinese
classical thought; constitution approved 1972; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 15 August
Branches: executive, legislative (unicameral), judiciary,
National Conference of Unification
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Exports: $10.0 billion (f.o.b., 1977); textiles and clothing,
electrical machinery, plywood, footwear, steel, ships
Imports: $10.8 billion (c.i.f., 1977); oil, ships, steel, wood,
wheat, organic chemicals, machinery
Major trade partners: exports-32% U.S., 21% Japan;
imports-35% Japan, 23% U.S. (1977)
Aid: economic-U.S. (FY46-77), $5.8 billion committed;
Japan (1965-75), $1.8 billion extended; military-U.S. (FY
46-77) $7.0 billion committed
Budget: $7.3 billion (1978)
Monetary conversion rate: rate fixed at 484 won=US$1
since December 1974
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Freight carried: rail (1976) 9.2 billion metric ton/km,
43.6 million metric tons; highway 21.8 million metric tons;
air (1959) 361,184 kg carried
Pipelines: 515 km refined products
Ports: 10 major, 18 minor
Civil air: 28 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 121 total, 114 usable; 54 with permanent-
surface runways; 16 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 17 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 8,777,000; 5,707,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually 408,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $2.6 billion; about 35% of central government budget
KUWAIT
LAND
16,058 km' (excluding neutral zone but including islands);
insignificant amount forested; nearly all desert, waste, or
urban
Land boundaries: 459 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 499 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,204,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 5.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Kuwaiti(s); adjective-Kuwaiti
Ethnic divisions: 85% Arabs, 13% Iranians, Indians, and
Pakistani; native Kuwaitis are a minority
Religion: 99% Muslim, 1% Christian, Hindu, Parsi, other
Language: Arabic; English commonly used foreign
language
Literacy: about 60%
Labor force: 340,000 (1976 est.); 26% manufacturing, 25%
services, 35% government and professions, 9% commerce,
5% oil industry; two-thirds of labor force is non-Kuwaiti
Organized labor: labor unions, first authorized in 1964,
formed in oil industry and among government personnel
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Kuwait
Type: nominal constitutional monarchy
Capital: Kuwait
Political subdivisions: 3 governorates, 10 voting
constituencies
Legal system: civil law system with Islamic law
significant in personal matters; constitution took effect 1963;
key provisions regarding election of National Assembly
suspended in August 1976; judicial review of legislative acts
not yet determined; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: 25 February
Branches: Council of Ministers
Government leader: Amir Jabir a]-Ahmad Al Sabah
Suffrage: native born and naturalized males age 21 or
over
Elections: National Assembly dissolved by Emir's decree
in August 1976
Political parties and leaders: political parties prohibited,
some small clandestine groups are active
Communists: insignificant
Other political or pressure groups: none
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU,
OAPEC, OPEC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $13.9 billion (1976), $13,080 per capita est.
Agriculture: virtually none, dependent on imports for
food; approx. 75% of potable water must be distilled or
imported
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KUWAIT/LAOS
Major industries: crude petroleum production average
for 1977, 1.92 million b/d; government revenues from taxes
and royalties on production, refining, and consumption, $8.5
billion, preliminary est. for 1976; refinery production 132
million bbls (1976), average b/d refinery capacity equaled
645,000 bbls at end of 1976; other major industries include
processing of fertilizers, chemicals; building materials; flour
Electric power: 1,625,000 kW capacity (1977); 5.1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 4,555 kWh per capita
Exports: $9.84 billion (f.o.b., 1976), of which petroleum
accounted for about 98%; nonpetroleum exports are mostly
reexports, $727 million (1976 est.)
Imports: $3.32 billion (c.i.f., 1976); major suppliers-U.S.,
Japan, U.K., West Germany
Aid: an aid donor, committed bilaterally or through
multilateral agencies nearly $3 billion in economic assistance
in 1975
Budget: (FY77/78) $7.9 billion revenues
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Kuwaiti dinar=US$3.48
(1976)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 2,445 km total; 2,195 km bituminous; 250 km
earth, sand, light gravel
Pipelines: crude oil, 877 km; refined products, 40 km;
natural gas, 121 km
Ports: 3 major (Ash Shuwaikh, Ash Shuaybah, Mina al
Ahmadi), 4 minor
Civil air: 17 major transport aircraft (including 7 leased
in)
Airfields: 11 total, 6 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 3 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: excellent international and ade-
quate domestic telecommunication facilities; 140,000 tele-
phones (13.0 per 100 popl.); 3 AM, 1 FM and 3 TV stations;
1 satellite station with Indian and Atlantic Ocean antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 311,000; about
179,000 fit for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1976,
$222,428,950; 8% of central government budget
LAND
236,804 km2; 8% agricultural, 60% forests, 32% urban,
waste, and other; except in very limited areas, soil is very
poor; most of forested area is not exploitable
Land boundaries: 5,053 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,545,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Lao (sing., Lao or Laotian); adjec-
tive-Lao or Laotian
Ethnic divisions: 48% Lao; 14% Tribal Tai; 25%
Phoutheung (Kha); 13% Meo, Yao, and other
Religion: 50% Buddhist, 50% animist and other
Language: Lao official, French predominant foreign
language
Literacy: about 12%
Labor force: about 1-1.5 million; 80%-90% agriculture
Organized labor: only labor organization is subordinate to
the Communist Party
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Lao People's Democratic Republic
Type: Communist state
Capital: Vientiane
Political subdivisions: 13 provinces subdivided into
districts, cantons, and villages
Legal system: based on civil law system; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 2 December
Branches: President; 45-member Supreme People's Coun-
cil; cabinet; cabinet is totally Communist but council
contains a few nominal neutralists and non-Communists;
National Congress of People's Representatives established
the current government structure in December 1975
Government leaders: President, Souphanouvong; Prime
Minister, Kaysone Phomvihan; Deputy Prime Ministers,
Nouhak Phoumsavan, Phoumi Vongvichit, Phoun Sipaseut,
and Khamtai Siphandone
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: elections for new National Assembly, scheduled
for April 1, 1976, have been postponed
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Political parties and leaders: Lao People's Revolutionary
Party (Communist) includes Lao Patriotic Front and
Alliance Committee of Patriotic Neutralist Forces; other
parties are moribund
Communists: Lao People's Revolutionary Party; member-
ship unknown
Other political or pressure groups: non-Communist
political groups are moribund; most leaders have fled the
country
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, ESCAP, FAO, G-77,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, Mekong Commit-
tee, NAM, SEAMES, U.N., UNCTAD, UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, GWMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $250 million, $80 per capita (1976 est.)
Agriculture: main crops-rice (overwhelmingly domi-
nant), corn, vegetables; formerly self-sufficient; food short-
ages (due in part to distribution deficiencies), including rice
Major industries: tin mining, timber, tobacco, textiles,
electric power
Shortages: capital equipment, petroleum, transportation
system, trained personnel
Electric power: 61,000 kW capacity (1977); 295 million
kWh produced (1977), 85 kWh per capita
Exports: $8.5 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); electric power,
forest products, tin concentrates; coffee, undeclared exports
of opium and tobacco
Imports: $55 million (c.i.f., est. 1977); rice and other
foodstuffs, petroleum products, machinery, transportation
equipment
Major trade partners: imports from Thailand, U.S.S.R.,
Japan, France, China, Vietnam; exports to Thailand and
Malaysia; trade with Communist countries insignificant;
Laos was once a major transit point in world gold trade,
value of 1973 gold reexports $55 million
Aid: economic-Communist: Eastern Europe, $4.0 mil-
lion (1974-75); U.S.S.R., $66 million committed (1975-76),
China, $42 million committed (1975-76); OPEC, $1.0
million (1975); Western: $151.4 million (1970-76); U.S.,
economic, $272.3 million (1970-75), military, $1,119.5
million (1970-75)
Budget: (1973-74) receipts, 13.3 billion kip; expenditures,
36.0 billion kip; deficit 22.7 billion kip (provisional totals);
45% military, 55% civilian; no data available since
Communists fully took over government in 1975
Monetary conversion rate: as of September 1977, 200
kip=US$1 (selling), 396-495 kip=US$1 (buying) (official)
2,000 liberation kip=US$1 (free market)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: about 18,000 km total; 1,300 km bituminous
or bituminous treated, 5,900 km gravel, crushed stone, or
improved earth; 10,800 km unimproved earth and often
impassable during rainy season mid-May to mid-September
Inland waterways: about 4,587 km, primarily Mekong
and tributaries; 2,897 additional kilometers are sectionally
navigable by craft drawing less than 0.5 m
Ports (river): 5 major, 4 minor
Airfields: 87 total, 77 usable; 9 with permanent-surface
runways; 11 with runways 1,220-2,439 m, 1 with runway
2,440-3,659 m
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 826,000; 441,000 fit for
military service; average number currently reaching usual
military age (18) annually, 37,000; no conscription age
specified
LEBANON
LEBANON
Mediterranean Beirw
Sea F
LAND
10,360 kmz; 27% agricultural land, 64% desert, waste, or
urban, 9% forested
Land boundaries: 531 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): no specific claims
(fishing, 6 nm)
Coastline: 225 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,540,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Lebanese (sing. and pl.); adjective-
Lebanese
Ethnic divisions: 93% Arab, 6% Armenian, 1% other
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Religion: 55% Christian, 44% Muslim and Druze, 1%
other (official estimates); Muslims, in fact, constitute a
majority
Language: Arabic (official); French is widely spoken
Literacy: 86%
Labor force: about 1 million economically active; 49%
agriculture, 11% industry, 14% commerce, 26% other;
moderate unemployment
Organized labor: about 65,000
GOVERNMENT
NOTE: Between early 1975 and late 1976, Lebanon was
torn by civil war between its Christians-then aided by
Syrian troops-and its Muslims and their Palestinian allies.
The cease-fire established in October 1976 has generally
held, despite occasional fighting, although the country is still
under the occupation of Arab peacekeeping forces, almost
entirely Syrian. In March 1978 southern Lebanon was
invaded by Israeli troops, who are slowly turning it over to a
United Nations interim force. The country's own army is
gradually being re-established but is still too fragile to give
the central government effective power. Israel's support of
the Christians and Syria's recent support of the Palestinians
have brought the two sides into rough equilibrium, but no
progress has been made on national reconciliation or
political reforms-the original cause of the war. The
following description is based on the present constitutional
and customary practices of the Lebanese system.
Legal name: Republic of Lebanon
Type: republic
Capital: Beirut
Political subdivisions: 5 provinces
Legal system: mixture of Ottoman law, canon law, and
civil law system; constitution mandated in 1920; no judicial
review of legislative acts; legal education at University of
Lebanon; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 22 November
Branches: power lies with President elected by parlia-
ment (Chamber of Deputies); cabinet appointed by Presi-
dent, approved by parliament; independent secular courts
on French pattern; religious courts for matters of marriage,
divorce, inheritance, etc.; by custom, President is a Maronite
Christian, Prime Minister a Sunni Muslim, and president of
parliament a Shia Muslim; each of 9 religious communities
represented in parliament in proportion to national numeri-
cal strength
Government leader: President Ilyas Sarkis
Suffrage: compulsory for all males over 21; authorized for
women over 21 with elementary education
Elections: Chamber of Deputies held every 4 years or
within 3 months of dissolution of Chamber; latest April 1972
Political parties and leaders: political party activity is
organized along sectarian lines; numerous political groupings
exist, consisting of individual political figures and followers
motivated by religious, clan, and economic considerations;
all parties have well-armed militias which are still involved
in occasional clashes
Communists: only legal Communist party in Middle East;
legalized in 1970; members and sympathizers estimated at
2,000-3,000
Other political or pressure groups: Palestinian guerrilla
organizations
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, IWC-
International Wheat Council, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
Agriculture: fruits, wheat, corn, barley, potatoes, tobacco,
olives, onions; not self-sufficient in food
Major industries: service industries, food processing,
textiles, cement, oil refining, chemicals, some metal fabricat-
ing, tourism
Electric power: 540,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 480 kWh per capita
Major trade partners: exports $0.9 billion est. (f.o.b.,
1976); most to Arab countries; imports $1.4 billion est. (f.o.b.,
1977); prior to the Civil War, chiefly from EC, U.K., and
Arab countries; trade deficit covered by large net receipts
from invisibles (particularly tourism and transportation) and
private capital inflow
Budget: (1978) expenditures $680 million, revenues $460
million est.
Monetary conversion rate: 2.9639 Lebanese pounds=
US$1 as of February 1978
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 378 km total; 296 km standard gage (1.435 m),
82 km 1.050-meter gage; all single track
Highways: 7,370 km total; 6,270 km paved, 450 km
gravel and crushed stone, 650 km improved earth
Pipelines: crude oil, 72 km
Ports: 3 major (Beirut, Tripoli, Sayda), 5 minor
Civil air: 35 major transport aircraft (including 13 leased
out)
Airfields: 8 total, 4 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: rebuilding in progress; internation-
al facilities restored, domestic being rebuilt; fair system of
microwave, cable; approx 125,000 telephones (5.0 per 100
popl.); 2 FM, 7 AM, 7 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean satellite
station; 3 submarine cables.
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 584,000; 357,000 fit for
military service; average of about 27,000 reach military age
(18) annually
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LAND
30,303 km'; 15% cultivable; largely mountainous
Land boundaries: 805 km
when he appointed Interim National Assembly to act as
legislative branch; judicial-63 Lesotho courts administer
customary law for Africans, High Court and subordinate
courts have criminal jurisdiction over all residents, Court of
Appeal at Maseru has appellate jurisdiction
Government leader: Prime Minister Chief Leabua
Jonathan
Suffrage: universal for adults
Elections: elections held in January 1970; nullified
allegedly because of election irregularities; subsequent
elections promised at unspecified date
Political parties and leaders: National Party (BNP),
Chief Leabua Jonathan; Basutoland Congress Party (BCP),
Ntsu Mokhehle
Voting strength: in 1965 elections for National Assembly,
BNP won 32 seats; BCP, 22 seats; minor parties, 4 seats
Communists: negligible, Communist Party of Lesotho
banned in early 1970
Member of: Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT (de
facto), IBRD, IDA, IFC, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO
PEOPLE
Population: 1,277,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Mosotho (sing.), Basotho (pl.); adjec-
tive-Basotho
Ethnic divisions: 99.7% Sotho, 1,600 Europeans, 800
Asians
Religion: 70% or more Christian, rest animist
Language: all Africans speak Sesotho vernacular; English
is second language for literates
Literacy: 40%
Labor force: 87.4% of resident population engaged in
subsistence agriculture; 150,000 to 250,000 spend 6 months
to many years as wage earners in South Africa
Organized labor: negligible
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Lesotho
Type: constitutional monarchy under King Moshoeshoe II;
independent member of commonwealth since 1966
Capital: Maseru
Political subdivisions: 9 administrative districts
Legal system: based on English common law and
Roman-Dutch law; constitution came into effect 1966;
judicial review of legislative acts in High Court and Court of
Appeal; legal education at National University of Lesotho;
has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 4 October
Branches: executive, divided between a largely ceremo-
nial King and a Prime Minister who leads cabinet of at least
7 members; Prime Minister dismissed bicameral legislature
in early 1970 and subsequently ruled by decree until 1973
ECONOMY
GNP: $315 million (FY74 est.), $270 per capita
Agriculture: exceedingly primitive, mostly subsistence
farming and livestock; principal crops are corn, wheat,
pulses, sorghum, barley
Major industries: none
Electric power: approximately 20 million kWh imported
from South Africa (1977)
Exports: labor to South Africa (remittances $120 million
est. in 1976); $12.4 million (est. f.o.b., 1976), wool, mohair,
wheat, cattle, diamonds, peas, beans, corn, hides, skins
Imports: $154.3 million (est. c.i.f., 1976); mainly corn,
building materials, clothing, vehicles, machinery, POL
Major trade partner: South Africa
Aid: economic aid-U.K. $9.4 million (plan FY71-75);
other $17.5 million (plan FY71-75); U.S. $30.2 million
authorized (FY61-76); no military aid
Budget: (FY76) revenues, $63 million; current expendi-
tures, $38 million; development budget, $25 million
Monetary conversion rate: Lesotho uses the South
African rand; 1 SA rand=US$1.15 (as of March 1978)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1.6 km; owned, operated, and included in the
statistics of the Republic of South Africa
Highways: approx. 3,916 km total; 218 km paved; 993 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil; 1,046 km improved,
1,659 km unimproved earth
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 21 total, 20 usable; 2 with runways 1,220-2,439
m, 1 with permanent surface runway
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Telecommunications: system a modest one consisting of a
few landlines, a small radio-relay system, and minor
radiocommunication stations; Maseru is the center; 3,725
telephones (0.3 per 100 pop1.); 2 AM, 1 FM, 1 TV station
planned
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 220,000; fit for military
service 122,000
LIBERIA
Atlantic Ocean
LAND
111,370 km2; 20% agricultural, 30% jungle and swamps,
40% forested, 10% unclassified
Land boundaries: 1,336 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 22 nm
Coastline: 579 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,733,000 (January 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Liberian(s); adjective-Liberian
Ethnic divisions: 5% descendants of immigrant Negroes;
95% indigenous Negroid African tribes including Kpelle,
Bassa, Kru, Grebo, Cola, Kissi, Krahn, and Mandingo
Religion: probably more Muslims than Christians;
70%-80% animist
Language: English official; 28 tribal languages or dialects,
pidgin English used by about 20%
Literacy: about 24% over age 5
Labor force: 600,000, of which 120,000 are in monetary
economy; about 2,000 non-African foreigners hold about
95% of the top level management and engineering jobs
Organized labor: 2% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Liberia
Type: republic in form; strong executive dominates, with
few constraints
Capital: Monrovia
Political subdivisions: country divided into 9 counties;
President appoints all officials of significance
Legal system: based on U.S. constitutional theory; recent
codes drawn up by Cornell University; constitution adopted
1847; amended 1907, 1926, 1934, 1955, and 1975; no
constitutional provision for judicial review of legislative acts;
legal education at Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law,
University of Liberia; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction,
with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 26 July
Branches: President, elected by popular vote, limited to a
single eight-year term, controls through appointive powers,
authority over national expenditures, and a variety of
informal sanctions; 2-house legislature elected by popular
vote; judiciary consisting of Supreme Court and variety of
lower courts
Government leader: President William R. Tolbert, Jr.
Suffrage: universal 18 years and over
Elections: members of House of Representatives elected
for 4-year terms, most recently in October 1975; Senate
members elected for 6-year terms, one-half elected in May
1973; President Tolbert, constitutional successor to President
Tubman who died in July 1971, completed the four year
term to which Tubman was elected and was then elected in
October 1975 for an eight-year term beginning in January
1976
Political parties and leaders: True Whig Party, in power
since 1878, only political party; President Tolbert is leader
Voting strength: 1975 elections uncontested; True Whig
Party won all but a handful of votes
Communists: no Communist Party and only a few
sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, ECA, ECOWAS, FAO, G-77, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM,
OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GDP: $923 million (1976 est.), $570 per capita; 4%
current annual growth rate (1967-76)
Agriculture: rubber, rice, oil palm, cassava, coffee, cocoa;
imports of rice, wheat, and live cattle and beef are necessary
for basic diet
Fishing: catch 23,000 metric tons
Industry: rubber processing, food processing, construction
materials, furniture, palm oil processing, mining (iron ore,
diamonds), 10,000 b/d oil refinery
Electric power: 327,000 kW capacity (1977); 980 million
kWh produced (1977), 580 kWh per capita
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Exports: $460 million (f.o.b., 1976); iron ore, rubber,
diamonds, lumber and logs, coffee, cocoa
Imports: $399 million (c.i.f., 1976); machinery, transpor-
tation equipment, petroleum products, manufactured goods,
foodstuffs
Major trade partners: U.S., West Germany, Netherlands,
Italy, Belgium
Aid: economic-(FY46-75) U.S., $240.2 million; mili-
tary-(FY53-75) U.S., $15.7 million; other aid ($73.1 million
through FY75), sources include IBRD, U.N., IMF, West
Germany, Republic of China
Budget: (FY77) revenues $167 million, expenditures $167
million; development budget $39 million
Monetary conversion rate: Liberia uses U.S. currency
Fiscal year: 1 July - 30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 499 km total; 354 km standard gage (1.435 m),
145 km narrow gage (1.067 m); all lines single track; rail
systems owned and operated by foreign steel and financial
interests in conjunction with Liberian Government
Highways: 7,952 km total; 603 km bituminous treated;
2,055 km gravel, and remainder improved and unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 370 km
Ports: 3 major (Monrovia, Buchanan, Greenville-Sino
Harbor), 4 minor
Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 80 total, 78 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 6 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: telephone and telegraph limited;
main center is Monrovia; 3,400 telephones (0.2 per 100
pop].); 5 AM, 2 FM, and 3 TV stations; I Atlantic Ocean
Comsat station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 364,000; 194,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Military budget: for year ending 30 June 1978, $8.9
million; 4.8% of central government budget
LAND
1,758,610 km2; 6% agricultural, 1% forested, 93% desert,
waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 4,345
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (except for
Gulf of Sidra where sovereignty is claimed and northern
limit of jurisdiction fixed at 32?30'N. and the unilaterally
proclaimed 100 nm zone around Tripoli)
Coastline: 1,770 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,758,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 4.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Libyan(s); adjective-Libyan
Ethnic divisions: 97% Berber and Arab with some Negro
stock; some Greeks, Maltese, Jews, Italians, Egyptians
Religion: 97% Muslim
Language: Arabic; Italian and English widely understood
in major cities
Literacy: 35%
Labor force: 900,000 of which about 350,000 are resident
foreigners (est. 1977)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Type: republic; major overhaul of the constitution and
government structure in March 1977 established a system of
popular congresses which theoretically controls the ruling
General Secretariat; nominally confederated with Egypt and
Syria in Confederation of Arab Republics (CAR) on I
September 1971
Capital: Tripoli
Political subdivisions: 10 administrative provinces closely
controlled by central government
Legal system: based on Italian civil law system and
Islamic law; separate religious courts; no constitutional
provision for judicial review of legislative acts; legal
education at Law School, at University of Libya at Benghazi;
has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 September
Branches: paramount political power and authority rests
with the Secretariat of the General People's Congress which
theoretically functions as a parliament with a cabinet called
the General People's Committee
Government leaders: Colonel Mu'ammar Qadhafi; Prime
Minister, Abdul Ati Ubaydi
Suffrage: universal
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Elections: resentatives to
are drawn from popularly
(elections are more or less
assembly in March 1972
LIBYA/LIECHTENSTEIN
the General People's Congress
elected municipal committees
continuous) election for CAR
Political parties and leaders: Libyan Arab Socialist
Union, Ahmad Shahati, Secretary General; Mu'ammar
Qadhafi, President
Communists: no organized party, negligible membership
Other political or pressure groups: various Arab nation-
alist movements and the Arab Socialist Resurrection (Bath)
party with small, almost negligible memberships may be
functioning clandestinely
Member of: AFDB, Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, ITU,
NAM, OAPEC, OAU, OPEC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $16.5 billion (1977), at current prices
Agriculture: main crops-wheat, barley, olives, dates,
citrus fruits, peanuts; approaching self-sufficiency in food
Major industries: petroleum, food processing, textiles,
handicrafts
Electric power: 1,500,000 kW capacity (1977); 2.1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 775 kWh per capita
Exports: $10.5 billion (f.o.b., 1977); over 99% petroleum
Imports: $5.4 billion (c.i.f., 1977)
Major trade partners: imports-Italy, West Germany,
U.S.; exports-Italy, West Germany, U.K., U.S., France
Aid: economic-no Communist country assistance; U.S.
aid extended $212.5 million (FY49-76); international organi-
zations $22 million; military-arms obtained by cash
purchase; chief suppliers France, U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia;
U.S. suspended since September 1970
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Libyan pound=US$3.38
Fiscal year: 1 January - 31 December (beginning 1974)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 16,250 km total; 7,750 km bituminous and
bitumi-nous treated, 8,500 km gravel, crushed stone and
earth
Pipelines: crude oil 3,251 km; natural gas 282 km; refined
products 443 km (includes 217 km liquid petroleum gas)
Ports: 3 major (Tobruk, Tripoli, Benghazi), 4 minor, and 5
petroleum terminals
Civil air: 37 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
in)
Airfields: 87 total, 77 usable; 14 with permanent-surface
runways, 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 12 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 29 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane
stations
Telecommunications: system is in top one-third of
African systems; consists of radio-relay and tropo-
spheric-scatter links, open-wire lines, and radiocommunica-
tion stations; principal centers are Tripoli and Benghazi;
49,800 telephones (1.8 per 100 Pop].); 15 AM, 1 FM, and 12
TV stations; 1 coaxial submarine cable
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 559,000; 327,000 fit for
military service; about 22,000 reach military age (17)
annually; conscription now being implemented
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $448 million; 5% of central government budget
LIECHTENSTEIN
WOVE
` Atlt4 ti
LAND
168 kmz
Land boundaries: 76 km
PEOPLE
Population: 22,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Iiechtensteiner(s); adjective-
Liechtenstein
Ethnic divisions: 95% Germanic, 5% Italian and other
Religion: 92% Roman Catholic
Language: German (dialect)
Literacy: 98%
Labor force: 7,000, 3,500 foreign workers (mostly from
Austria and Italy); 59% industry, 20% trade and commerce,
13% professional and other, 8% agriculture
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Principality of Liechtenstein
Type: hereditary constitutional monarchy
Capital: Vaduz
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LIECHTENSTEIN/LUXEMBOURG
Political subdivisions: 11 districts
Legal system: based on Swiss law; constitution adopted
1921; judicial review of legislative acts in a special
Constitutional Court; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction,
with reservations
Branches: unicameral Parliament, hereditary Prince,
independent judiciary
Government leaders: lIead of State, Prince Franz Joseph
II; Chief of Government, Dr. Walter Kieber
Suffrage: males age 20 and over
Elections: every 4 years; next elections 1978
Political parties and leaders: Fatherland Union Party
(VU), Dr. Alfred Hilbe; Progressive Citizens' Party (FBP),
Dr. Gerard Batliner
Voting strength (1974 election): FBP over 50%
Communists: none
Member of: IAEA, ITU, UPU, considering U.N. member-
ship; desires affiliation with The Council of Europe; under a
1923 treaty, Switzerland handles Liechtenstein's post and
telegraph systems, customs, and foreign relations, WIPO
ECONOMY
Liechtenstein has a prosperous economy based primarily
on small-scale light industry and some farming. Textiles,
ceramics, precision instruments, pharmaceuticals, and
canned foods are the principal manufactures, intended
almost entirely for export. Industry accounts for 95 percent
of total employment. Livestock raising and dairying are the
main sources of income in the small farm sector. A major
source of income to the government is the sale of postage
stamps to foreign collectors, estimated at $6 million
annually. In addition, low business taxes and easy incorpo-
rated rules have induced between 20,000 and 30,000 holding
companies, so-called letter box companies, to establish
nominal offices in the principality. The average tax paid by
one of these companies is about $400 a year.
The Liechtenstein economy is tied closely to that of
Switzerland in a customs union. No national accounts data
are available.
GNP: $292 million (1977 provisional)
Major trade partners: exports (1975)-$202 million;
50.6% EFTA, 41.4% Switzerland, 26.7% EEC; exports
(1977)-$274 million
Electric power: 23,000 kW capacity (1977); 56 million
kWh produced (1977), 2,240 kWh per capita; power is
exchanged with Switzerland, but net exports average 35
million kWh yearly
Budget: (1977 est.) revenues $79.0 million, expenditures
$75.9 million, surplus $3.1 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 16.00 km, standard gage (1.435 m), electrified;
owned, operated, and included in statistics of Austrian
Federal Railways
Highways: no information on total kilometers
Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft registered and
operated in Switzerland
Airfields: none
Telecommunications: automatic telephone system serv-
ing about 16,200 telephones (67.7 per 100 pop].); no
broadcast facilities
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of Switzerland
LUXEMBOURG
LAND
2,590 kmz; 25% arable, 27% meadows and pasture, 15%
waste or urban, 33% forested, negligible amount of inland
water
Land boundaries: 356 km
PEOPLE
Population: 358,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Luxembourger(s); adjective-Luxem-
bourg
Ethnic divisions: 83% Luxembourger, including an
estimated 5% of Italian descent; remainder French, German,
Belgian, etc.
Religion: 97% Roman Catholic, remaining 3% Protestant
and Jewish
Language: Luxembourgish, German, French; most edu-
cated Luxembourgers also speak English
Literacy: 98%
Labor force: (1974) 158,000; 10% agriculture (including
forestry and fishing), 48% industry, 42% services; 30% of
labor force is foreign, comprising workers from neighboring
areas of Belgium, France, and West Germany, as well as
Italy and Portugal, unemployment 0.6% August 1977
Organized labor: 45% of labor force
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LUXEMBOURG/MACAO
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Grand Duchy of
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Luxembourg
Political subdivisions: unitary
tive purposes has 3 districts
Grevenmacher) and 12 cantons
state, but for administra-
(Luxembourg, Diekirch,
Legal system: based on civil law system; constitution
adopted 1868; judicial review of legislative acts in the
Cassation Court only; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 23 June
Branches: parliamentary democracy; seven ministers
comprise Council of Government headed by President,
which constitutes the executive; it is responsible to the
unicameral legislature, the Chamber of Deputies; the
Council of State, appointed for indefinite term, exercises
some powers of an upper house; judicial power exercised by
independent courts
Government leaders: Grand Duke Jean, Head of State;
Gaston Thorn, Prime Minister
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: every 5 years for entire Chamber of Deputies;
latest elections May 1974
Political parties and leaders: Christian Social Party,
Pierre Werner (Parliamentary President) and Jacques Santer
(Party President); Socialist, Lydie Schmit (Party President);
Social Democrat, Henry Cravatte (Party President); Demo-
cratic, Gaston Thorn (Party President and Prime Minister);
Communist, Dominique Urbany
Voting strength in Chamber of Deputies (1974):
Christian Socialist, 18; Socialist Workers, 17; Democrats, 14;
Social Democrats, 5; Communists, 5
Communists: 500 party members (1974)
Other political or pressure groups: group of steel
industries representing iron and steel industry, Centrale
Paysanne representing agricultural producers; Christian and
Socialist labor unions, Federation of Industrialists; Artisans
and Shopkeepers Federation
Member of: Benelux, BLEU, Council of Europe, EC,
ECSC, EEC, EIB, EURATOM, FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IEA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITU, NATO,
OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WEU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $2.5 billion, $7,041 per capita (1977); average
annual real GNP growth 2.7% (1971-77); 60% private
consumption, 16% public consumption, 28% investment;
- 6.9% net exports, 2.9% change in stocks
Agriculture: mixed farming; main crops-grains, pota-
toes, fodder beets; food shortages-sugar, bread grains, fats;
caloric intake, 3,150 calories per day per capita (1968-69)
Major industries: iron and steel, food processing,
chemicals, metal products and engineering, tires
Crude steel: 4.28 million metric tons produced (1977),
11.8 metric tons per capita
Electric power: 1,350,000 kW capacity (1977); 1,600
million kWh produced (1977), 4,420 kWh per
Exports: see Belgium
Imports: see Belgium
Major trade partners: Luxembourg and Belgium form an
economic and customs union and report their foreign trade
jointly (see Belgium); Luxembourg's principal exports are
iron and steel products; principal imports are coal and
consumer products; most foreign trade is with Germany,
Belgium, and other EC countries
Budget (1977) expenditures $1,046 million, revenues
$1,026 million, deficit $20 million
Monetary conversion rate: LF36.36=US$1, 1976 aver-
age; under the BLEU agreement, the Luxembourg franc is
equal to the Belgian franc which circulates freely in
Luxembourg
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS 160 km
Railroads: 270 km standard gage (1.435 m);
double track; 136 km electrified
Highways: 4,985 km total; all paved; about 80 km limited
access divided highway completed or under construction
Inland waterways: 37 km; Moselle River
Pipelines: refined products, 48 km
Port: (river) Mertert
Civil air: 14 major transport aircraft, including 1 leased in
and 1 leased out
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in
Telecommunications: adequate and efficient system;
158,000 telephones (44.2 per 100 popl.); 4 AM, 3 FM, 2 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 83,000; 71,000 fit for
military service; about 3,000 reach military age (19)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $28,794,467, 3.5% of the central government budget
MACAO
LAND
15.5 km2; 10% agricultural, 90% urban
Land boundaries: 201 in
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm; fishing, 12
nm
Coastline: 40 km
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MACAO/MADAGASCAR
Y7GT-NA HONG KONG
MACAO
South
China
Sea
PEOPLE
Population: 251,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1972)
Nationality: noun-Macaon(s); adjective-Macaon
Ethnic divisions: 99% Chinese, 1% Portuguese
Religion: mainly Buddhist; 17,000 Catholics, about
one-half are Chinese
Language: 98% Chinese, 2% Portuguese
Literacy: almost 100% among Portuguese and Macanese;
no data on Chinese population
Labor force: 5% agriculture, 30% manufacturing, 3%
construction, 1% utilities, 27% commerce, 8% transportation
and communications, 26% services (1960 data)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Province of Macao
Type: overseas province of Portugal
Capital: Lisbon (Portugal)
Political subdivisions: municipality of Macao, and 2
islands
Legal system: Portuguese civil law system
Branches: 17-member Legislative Assembly, with Gover-
nor and 5 appointed, 1 specially nominated, and 10 elected
representatives
Government leader: Col. Eduardo Garcia Leandro
Suffrage: Portuguese, Chinese and foreign residents over
18
Elections: conducted every 4 years; last held 1976
Political parties and leaders: Association to Defend the
Interests of Macao; Macao Democratic Center; Group to
Study the Development of Macao; Macao Independent
Group
Communists: numbers unknown
Other political or pressure groups: wealthy Macanese
and Chinese representing local interests, wealthy pro-Com-
munist merchants representing China's interests; in January
1967 Macao Government acceded to Chinese demands
which gave Chinese veto power over administration of the
enclave
ECONOMY
Agriculture: main crops-rice, vegetables; food short-
ages-rice, vegetables, meat; depends mostly on imports for
food requirements
Major industries: textiles, fireworks
Electric power: 116,000 kW capacity (1977); 210 million
kWh produced (1977), 835 kWh per capita
Exports: $185 million (f.o.b., 1976); textiles and clothing,
foodstuffs
Imports: $160 million (c.i.f., 1976)
Major trade partners: exports-23% West Germany, 17%
France, 10% U.K.; imports-68% Hong Kong, 24% China
(1976)
Monetary conversion rate: 5.4 patacas=US$1 (December
1975); pataca has been pegged to Hong Kong dollar starting
in 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 42 km paved
Ports: 1 major
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: none; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: fairly modern communication fa-
cilities provide adequate services for domestic and interna-
tional requirements; broadcasting coverage is provided by
AM and FM radio facilities and a wired broadcast network;
11,765 telephones; 75,000 radio receivers; 2 AM, 2 FM and
no TV stations; no submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 60,000; 35,000 fit for
military service
Defense is responsibility of Portugal
Personnel: there are no Portuguese military personnel in
Macao
MADAGASCAR
LAND
595,700 km'; 5% cultivated, 58% pastureland, 21%
forested, 8% wasteland, 2% rivers and lakes, 6% other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 50 nm
Coastline: 4,828 km
PEOPLE
Population: 8,158,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Malagasy (sing. and pl.); adjective-
Malagasy
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Ethnic divisions: basic split between highlanders of
predominantly Malayo-Indonesian origin, consisting of Mer-
ina (1,643,000) and related Betsileo (760,000), on the one
hand, and coastal tribes with mixed Negroid, Malayo-Indo-
nesian, and Arab ancestry on the other; coastal tribes include
Betsimisaraka 941,000, Tsimihety 442,000, Sakalava
375,000, Antaisaka 415,000; there are also 10-12,000
European French, 5,000 Indians of French nationality, and
5,000 Creoles
Religion: more than half animist; about 41% Christian,
7% Muslim
Language: French and Malagasy official
Literacy: 45% of population age 10 and over
Labor force: about 3.4 million, of which 90% are
nonsalaried family workers engaged in subsistence agricul-
ture; of 175,000 wage and salary earners, 26% agriculture,
17% domestic service, 15% industry, 14% commerce, 11%
construction, 9% services, 6% transportation, 2% miscel-
laneous
Organized labor: 4% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic Republic of Madagascar
Type: republic; real authority in hands of military-
dominated Supreme Revolutionary Council
Capital: Antananarivo
Political subdivisions: 6 provinces
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
traditional Malagasy law; constitution of 1959 modified in
October 1972 by law establishing provisional government
institutions; new constitution accepted by referendum in
December 1975; legal education at National School of Law,
University of Madagascar; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 26 June
Branches: executive-a 21-member Supreme Revolution-
ary Council (made up of military and political leaders);
assisted by cabinet called Council of Ministers; People's
National Assembly; Military Committee for Development;
regular courts are patterned after French system, and a High
Council of Institutions reviews all legislation to determine its
constitutional validity
Government leader: Commander Didier Ratsiraka,
President
Suffrage: universal for adults (18 and above)
Elections: referendum held in December 1975 gave
overwhelming approval to government and new constitu-
tion; elections for People's National Assembly held in June
1977; only one political grouping allowed to take part in the
election, "The Front for the Defense of Malagasy Socialist
Revolution," which presented a single list of candidates
Political parties and leaders: 6 parties are now allowed
political activity under the National Front and are
represented on the Supreme Revolutionary Council; the 6
parties are: AREMA (President Ratsiraka's Advance Guard
of the Malagasy Revolution); AKFM (Pastor Richard
Andriamaniato's pro-Soviet Congress Party for Malagasy
Independence); VONJY (Dr. Pazanabahiny Marojama's
Movement for National Unity); UDECMA (Norbert Andria-
morasata's Malagasy Christian Democratic Union); MFM
(Manandafy Rakotonirina's Militants for the Establishment
of a Proletarian Regime); MONIMA (Mouvement Nationale
pour L'Independence de Madagascar) party apparently split
over issue of joining National Front, leader of faction
supporting Front unknown, Monja Jaona leads other faction
Voting strength: number of registered voters (1977)-3.5
million; in 1977 local elections, President Ratsiraka's
AREMA captured approximately 89.5% of the 73,000
available positions on 11,400 local Executive Committees;
AKFM won about 7.3% of the seats, MONIMA 1.7%, and
VONJY 1.4%; UDECMA won only about 45 seats
Communists: Communist party of virtually no impor-
tance; small and vocal group of Communists has gained
strong position in leadership of AKFM, the rank and file of
which is non-Communist
Member of: EAMA, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $1.9 billion (1977 est.), about $220 per capita; real
growth less than 1% (1970-75)
Agriculture: cash crops-coffee, vanilla, cloves, sugar,
tobacco, sisal, rice, raphia; food crops-rice, cassava, cereals,
potatoes, corn, beans, bananas, coconuts, and peanuts;
animal husbandry widespread; imports some rice, milk, and
cereal
Fishing: catch 56,000 metric tons (1975); exports $16.5
million (1974)
Major industries: agricultural processing (meat canneries,
soap factories, brewery, tanneries, sugar refining), light
consumer goods industries (textiles, glassware), cement plant,
auto assembly plant, paper mill, oil refinery
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Electric power: 95,000 kW capacity (1977); 465 million
kWh produced (1977), 60 kWh per capita
Exports: $294 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); 30% coffee, 8%
vanilla, 7% sugar, 6% cloves; agricultural and livestock
products account for about 85% of export earnings
Imports: $318 million (c.i.f., 1977 est.); consumer goods
about 19%, 21% foodstuffs, 41% primary products (crude oil,
fertilizers, metal products), 19% capital goods (1974)
Major trade partners: France (in 1974 accounted for 37%
of exports and 48% of imports), U.S., EC; trade with
Communist countries remains a minute part of total trade
Budget: (FY75) revenues $450 million (including $78
million projected borrowing), expenditures $417 million of
which $300 million current, $117 million development
Monetary conversion rate: 248 Malagasy francs=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 884 km of meter gage (1.00 m)
Highways: 26,992 km total; 4,285 km paved, 228 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil; remainder improved
and unimproved earth (est.)
Inland waterways: of local importance only, Lake
Alaotra, isolated streams and portions of Canal des
Pangalanes
Ports: 4 major (Tamatave, Diego Suarez, Majunga,
Tulear)
Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
out)
Airfields: 211 total, 118 usable; 28 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 43 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: system above African average;
includes open-wire lines, some radio-relay and coaxial links
and 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite ground station; 28,000
telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); 10 AM, no FM, and 4 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,751,000; 1,034,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually about 84,000
MALAWI
LAND
95,053 km'; about 31% of land area arable (of which less
than half is cultivated), nearly 25% forested, 6% meadow
and pasture, 38% other
Land boundaries: 2,881 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,694,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.9% (8-66 to 10-77)
Nationality: noun-Malawian(s); adjective-Malawian
Ethnic divisions: over 99% native African, less than 1%
European and Asian
Religion: majority animist; rest Christian and Muslim
Language: English and Chichewa official; Lomwe is
second African language
Literacy: 15% of population
Labor force: 225,000 wage earners employed in Malawi
(1974); 30% agriculture, 11% construction, 10% commerce,
13% manufacturing, 10% administration, 26% miscellaneous
services; 6,000 Europeans permanently employed
Organized labor: small minority of wage earners are
unionized
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Malawi
Type: republic since July 1966; independent member of
Commonwealth since July 1964
Capital: Lilongwe
Political subdivisions: 3 administrative regions and 23
districts
Legal system: based on English common law and
customary law; constitution adopted 1964; judicial review of
legislative acts in the Supreme Court of Appeal; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Republic Day, 6 July
Branches: strong presidential system with cabinet ap-
pointed by President; unicameral National Assembly of 60
elected and 15 nominated members; High Court with Chief
Justice and at least 2 justices
Government leader: Life President H. Kamuzu Banda
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: parliamentary elections scheduled to be held
before the end of 1978
Political parties and leaders: Malawi Congress Party
(MCP), Dr. H. Kamuzu Banda
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Communists: no Communist Party; Malawi maintains no
foreign relations with Communist governments
Member of: AFDB, EEC (associate member), FAO, G-77,
GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITU,
OAU, U.N., UNESCO, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $840 million (1977 est.), $150 per capita; real
growth rate 5.5% (1973-75)
Agriculture: cash crops-tobacco, tea, sugar, peanuts,
cotton, tung, maize; subsistence crops-corn, sorghum,
millet, pulses, root crops, fruit, vegetables, rice
Electric power: 105,000 kW capacity (1977); 315 million
kWh produced (1977), 60 kWh per capita
Major industries: agricultural processing (tea, tobacco,
sugar), sawmilling, cement, consumer goods
Exports: $224 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); tobacco, tea,
sugar, peanuts, cotton
Imports: $24 billion (c.i.f., 1977 est.); manufactured
goods, machinery and transport equipment, building and
construction materials, fuel, fertilizer
Major trade partners: exports-U.K., other EC, Rhodesia,
South Africa; imports-South Africa, U.K., Rhodesia, other
EC
Aid: economic-U.K. provides major development sup-
port, about $144 million (1964-74); U.S. aid commitments,
$31.6 million (FY56-76); military-U.K., $2.4 million
(1954-68)
Budget: FY77/78 revenues $113 million; expenditures
$106 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Malawi kwacha=US$1.12
Fiscal year: 1 April - 31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 566 km 1.067-meter gage
Highways: 14,913 km total; 1,385 km paved; 631 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil; 8,714 km improved
earth, 4,183 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: Lake Malawi, 1,290 km and Shire
River, 144 km, 3 lake ports
Ports: no maritime ports
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 46 total, 46 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 9 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: the system is above average for
African countries and consists of open-wire lines, radio-relay
links, and radiocommunication stations; principal centers are
Blantyre, Zomba, Lilongwe, and Muzuzu; 19,800 telephones
(0.4 per 100 pop1.); 6 AM, 4 FM and no TV stations; 1 Indian
Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,104,000; about
561,000 fit for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1978,
$14.0 million; 6.7% of recurrent central government budget
MALAYSIA
NOTE: Malaysia, which came into being on 16 September
1963, consists of Peninsular Malaysia, which includes 11
states of the former Federation of Malaya, plus East
Malaysia, which includes the 2 former colonies of North
Borneo (renamed Sabah) and Sarawak
LAND
Peninsular Malaysia: 131,313 km'; 20% cultivated, 26%
forest reserves, 54% other
Sabah: 76,146 km'; 13% cultivated, 34% forest reserves,
53% other
Sarawak: 125,097 kml;_ 21% cultivated, 24% forest
reserves, 55% other
Land boundaries: 509 km Peninsular Malaysia, 1,786 km
East Malaysia
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 2,068 km Peninsular Malaysia, 2,607 km East
Malaysia
PEOPLE
Population: 12,864,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.7% (current)
Peninsular Malaysia: 10,725,000, average annual
growth rate 2.5% (7-70 to 7-76)
Sabah: 948,000, average annual growth rate 4.8% (7-70
to 7-76)
Sarawak: 1,191,000, average annual growth rate 2.6%
(8-70 to 1-75)
Nationality: noun-Malaysian(s); adjective-Malaysian
Ethnic divisions:
Malaysia: 50% Malay, 35% Chinese, 10% Indian
Peninsular Malaysia: 53% Malay, 35% Chinese, 11%
Indian and Pakistani, 1% other
Sabah: 21% Chinese, 69% indigenous tribes, 10% other
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Sarawak: 30% Chinese, 50% indigenous tribes, 19%
Malay, 1% other
Religion:
Peninsular Malaysia: Malays nearly all Muslim,
Chinese Predominantly Buddhists, Indians predominantly
Hindu
Sabah: 38% Muslim, 17% Christian, 45% other
Sarawak: 23% Muslim, 24% Buddhist and Confucianist,
16% Christian, 35% tribal religion, 2% other
Language:
Peninsular Malaysia: Malay (official); English, Chinese
dialects, Tamil
Sabah: English, Malay, numerous tribal dialects,
Mandarin and Hakka dialects predominate among Chinese
Sarawak: English, Malay, Mandarin, numerous tribal
languages
Literacy:
Peninsular Malaysia: about 48%
Sabah and Sarawak: 23%
Labor force:
Malaysia: 4.2 million (1975)
Peninsular Malaysia: 3.6 million; 46.2% agriculture,
forestry, and fishing, 10.9% manufacturing and construction,
31.9% trade, transport, and services (1975)
.Sabah: 213,000 (1967); 80% agriculture, forestry, and
fishing, 6% manufacturing and construction, 13% trade and
transportation, 1% other
Sarawak: 341,000 (1967); 80% agriculture, forestry, and
fishing, 6% manufacturing and construction, 13% trade,
transportation, and services, 1% other
Organized labor: 500,000 (1975 est.), about 15% of total
labor force; unemployment about 7% of total labor force, but
higher in urban areas
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Malaysia
Type:
Malaysia: constitutional monarchy nominally headed
by Paramount Ruler (King); a bicameral Parliament
consisting of a 58-member Senate and a 154-member House
of Representatives
Peninsular Malaysian states: hereditary rulers in all
but Penang and Malacca where Governors appointed by
Malaysian Government; powers of state governments limited
by federal constitution
Sabah: self-governing state within Malaysia in which it
holds 16 seats in House of Representatives; foreign affairs,
defense, internal security, and other powers delegated to
federal government
Sarawak: self-governing state within Malaysia in which
it holds 24 seats in House of Representatives; foreign affairs,
defense, and internal security, and other powers are
delegated to federal government
Capital:
Peninsular Malaysia: Kuala Lumpur
Sabah: Kota Kinabalu
Sarawak: Kuching
Political subdivisions: 13 states (including Sabah and
Sarawak)
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
came into force 1963; judicial review of legislative acts in the
Supreme Court at request of Supreme Head of the
Federation; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 31 August
Branches: 9 state rulers alternate as Paramount Ruler for
5-year terms; locus of executive power vested in Prime
Minister and cabinet, who are responsible to bicameral
parliament; following communal rioting in May 1969,
government imposed state of emergency and suspended
constitutional rights of all parliamentary bodies; parliamen-
tary democracy resumed in February 1971
Peninsular Malaysia: executive branches of 11 states
vary in detail but are similar in design; a Chief Minister,
appointed by hereditary ruler or Governor, heads an
executive council (cabinet) which is responsible to an
elected, unicameral legislature
Sarawak and Sabah: executive branch headed by
Governor appointed by central government, largely ceremo-
nial role; executive power exercised by Chief Minister who
heads parliamentary cabinet responsible to unicameral
legislature; judiciary part of Malaysian judicial system
Government leader: Head of State, Hussein Orin
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: minimum of every 5 years, last elections
August 1974
Political parties and leaders:
Peninsular Malaysia: National Front, a confederation
of 11 political parties dominated by United Malays National
Organization (UMNO), Hussein Orin; opposition parties are
Democratic Action Party (DAP) and Islamic Party (PAS)
Sabah: Berjaya Party, Datak Harris Sallah; United
Sabah National Organization (USNO), Tan Sri Haii Mohd
Said Keruak; Sabah Chinese Association (SCA), Khoo Siak
Chiew
Sarawak: coalition Sarawak Alliance composed of the
Pesaka/Bumipatra Party, Rahman Yaacub, the United
People's Party (SUPP), Ong Kee Hui, and Sarawak Chinese
Association; Sarawak National Party (SNAP), Stephen
Ningkan; Sarawak Native Peoples Party (PAJAR), Alli Kawi
Voting strength:
Peninsular Malaysia: (1974 election) National Front
controls 135 of 154 seats in lower house of parliament
Sabah: (April 1976 Assembly Elections) Berjaya Party
controls 35 of 54 seats in State Assembly, USNO controls 19
remaining seats
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Sarawak: (1974 elections) National Front controls all 48
State Assembly seats
Communists:
Peninsular Malaysia: approximately 3,000 armed
insurgents on Thailand side of Thai/Malaysia border;
approximately 300 full-time inside Peninsular Malaysia
Sarawak: 125 armed insurgents in Sarawak
Sabah: insignificant
Member of: ADB, ANRPC, ASEAN, Colombo Plan,
Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, NAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP:
Malaysia: $12.4 billion (1977), $989 per capita; average
annual real growth 7.8% (1970-76); 8.0% (1977)
Agriculture:
Peninsular Malaysia: natural rubber, oil palm, rice;
10%-15% of rice requirements imported
Sabah: mainly subsistence; main crops-rubber, tim-
ber, coconut, rice; food deficit-rice
Sarawak: main crops-rubber, timber, pepper; food
deficit-rice
Fishing: catch 376,690 metric tons (1975)
Major industries:
Peninsular Malaysia: rubber and oil palm processing
and manufacturing, light manufacturing industry, elec-
tronics, tin mining and smelting, logging and processing
timber
Sabah: logging, petroleum production
Sarawak: agriculture processing, petroleum production
and refining, logging
Electric power:
Peninsular Malaysia: 1,475,000 kW capacity (1977);
6.5 billion kWh produced (1977), 550 kWh per capita
Sabah: 124,200 kW capacity (1977); 330 million kWh
produced (1977), 375 kWh per capita
Sarawak: 91,000 kW capacity (1977); 250 million kWh
produced (1977), 185 kWh per capita
Exports: $6.1 billion (f.o.b., 1977); natural rubber, palm
oil, tin, timber, petroleum
Imports: $5.0 billion (c.i.f., 1977)
Major trade partners: exports-19% Singapore, 18% U.S.,
20% Japan; imports-21% Japan, 11% U.K., 12% U.S., 9%
Singapore
Aid: U.S. economic 1970-76, $23.1 million; military $64.7
million; Western (except U.S.), $562.6 million; OPEC, 1974-
76, $186.5 million
Budget: 1977 revenues $3.0 billion; expenditures $3.7
billion; deficit $700 million; 20% military, 80% civilian
Monetary conversion rate: (Malaysia) 2.36 ringgits=
US$1 (February 1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads:
Peninsular Malaysia: 1,665 km 1.04-meter gage; 13 km
double track; government-owned
East Malaysia: 154 km meter gage (1.00 m) in Sabah
Highways:
Peninsular Malaysia: 19,753 km total; 15,900 km hard
surfaced (mostly bituminous surface treatment), 2,970 km
crushed stone/gravel, 883 km improved or unimproved
earth
East Malaysia: about 5,426 km total (1,644 km in
Sarawak, 3,782 km in Sabah); 819 km hard surfaced (mostly
bituminous surface treatment), 2,936 km gravel or crushed
stone, 1,671 km earth
Inland waterways:
Peninsular Malaysia: 3,194 km
East Malaysia: 4,087 km (1,569 km in Sabah, 2,518 km
in Sarawak)
Ports:
Peninsular Malaysia: 2 major, 15 minor
East Malaysia: 1 major, 14 minor (5 minor in Sabah; 1
major, 9 minor in Sarawak)
Civil air: approximately 27 major transport aircraft
Pipelines: crude oil, 69 km; refined products, 56 km
Airfields:
Peninsular Malaysia: 60 total, 60 usable; 16 with
permanent-surface runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m,
11 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Sabah: 34 total, 34 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Sarawak: 45 total, 45 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
runways; 4 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications:
Peninsular Malaysia: good intercity service provided
mainly by microwave relay; international service good; good
coverage by radio and television broadcasts; 278,000
telephones (2.7 per 100 popl.); 26 AM, 1 FM, and 16 TV
stations; submarine cables extend to India, Sri Lanka, and
Singapore; connected to SEACOM submarine cable terminal
at Singapore by microwave relay; 1 ground satellite station
Sabah: adequate intercity radio-relay network extends
to Sarawak via Brunei; 23,068 telephones (2.7 per 100 pop].);
5 AM, 1 FM, 5 TV stations; SEACOM submarine cable links
to Hong Kong and Singapore; 1 ground satellite station
Sarawak: adequate intercity radio-relay network ex-
tends to Sabah via Brunei; 28,000 telephones (2.4 per 100
popl.); 4 AM stations, no FM, and 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower:
Peninsular Malaysia: males 15-49, 2,421,000;
1,535,000 fit for military service
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MALAYSIA/MALDIVES
Sabah: males 15-49, 195,000; 114,000 fit for military
service
Sarawak: males 15-49, 258,000; 154,000 fit for military
service; conscription age for Malaysia is 21-an age reached
by about 1.25,000 annually
External defense dependent on loose Five Power Defense
Agreement (FPDA) which replaced Anglo-Malayan Defense
Agreement of 1957 .as amended in 1963
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $689 million; about 13.4% of central government
budget
MALDIVES
Arabian
Sea
Laccadive "LANKA
Sea
LAND
298 km2; 2,000 islands grouped into 12 atolls, about 220
islands inhabited
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): the land and sea
between latitudes 7?9'N. and 0?45'S. and between longi-
tudes 72?30'E. and 73?48'E; these coordinates form a
rectangle of approximately 37,000 nm2; territorial sea ranges
from 2.75 to 55 nm; fishing, approximately 100 nm
Coastline: 644 km (approx.)
PEOPLE
Population: 141,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Maldivian(s); adjective-Maldivian
Ethnic divisions: admixtures of Sinhalese, Dravidian,
Arab, and Negro
Religion: official Sunni Muslim
Language: Divehi (dialect of Sinhala)
Literacy: largely illiterate
Labor force: fishing industry employs most of the male
population
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Maldives
Type: republic
Capital: Male
Political subdivisions: 19 administrative districts corre-
sponding to atolls
Legal system: based on Islamic law with admixtures of
English common law primarily in commercial matters; has
not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 26 July
Branches: popularly elected unicameral national legisla-
ture (Majlis) (members elected for 5-year terms); elected
President, chief executive; appointed Chief Justice responsi-
ble for administration of Islamic law
Government leader: President Ibrahim Nasir
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Political parties and leaders: no organized political
parties; country governed by the Didi clan for the past eight
centuries
Communists: negligible number
Member of: Colombo Plan, FAO, G-77 GATT (de facto),
1MCO, ITU, NAM, U.N., UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $17.4 million (1974), $135 per capita
Agriculture: crops-coconut and millet; shortages-rice,
wheat
Fishing: catch 27,900 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: fishing; some coconut processing
Electric power: 4,000 kW capacity (1977); 6 million kWh
produced (1977), 50 kWh per capita
Exports: $3 million (1975); fish
Imports: $9.3 million (1975)
Major trade partners: Sri Lanka, Japan
Aid: U.K. (1960-65), $1.4 million drawn; Sri Lanka (1967),
$1 million committed; Kuwait $5 million; other OPEC
countries, Japan and India (amounts not known)
Monetary conversion rate: 3.93 Maldivian rupees=US$1,
official rate; 8.5 rupees=US$1, market rate (February 1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: none
Ports: 2 minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: minimal domestic and internation-
al telecommunication facilities; 480 telephones (0.4 per 100
popl.); 1 AM station; 1 Comsat station under construction
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National holiday: Independence Day, 22 September
Branches: executive authority exercised by Military
Committee of National Liberation (MCNL) composed of 11
army officers; under MCNL functional cabinet composed of
civilians and army officers; judiciary
Government leaders: Col. Moussa Traore, President of
MCNL, Chief of State and head of government
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Political parties and leaders: political activity proscribed
by military government but government in process of
forming new single party called the Democratic Union of
Malian People (UDPM)
Elections: MCNL promises elections at unspecified date
Communists: a few Communists and some sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, APC, CEAO, ECA, ECOWAS, FAO,
G-77, GATT (de facto), IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO,
IMF, ITU, Niger River Commission, NAM, OAU, OMVS
(Organization for the Development of the Senegal River
Valley), U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
Atlantic
Ocean
LAND
1,204,350 km'; only about a fourth of area arable, forests
negligible, rest sparse pasture or desert
Land boundaries: 7,459 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,284,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Malian(s); adjective-Malian
Ethnic divisions: 99% native African including tribes of
both Berber and Negro descent
Religion: 90% Muslim, 9% anin.ist, 1% Christian
Language: French official; several African languages, of
which Mande group most widespread
Literacy: under 5%
Labor force: approximately 100,000 salaried, 50,000 of
whom are employed by the government; most of population
engaged in agriculture and animal husbandry
Organized labor: Union National des Travailleurs Maliens
(UNTM) is umbrella organization over thirteen national
unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Mali
Type: republic; under military regime since November
1968
Capital: Bamako
Political subdivisions: 6 administrative regions; 42
administrative districts (cercles), arrondissements, villages;
all subordinate to central government
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1974, comes into full
effect in 1979; judicial review of legislative acts in
Constitutional Section of Court of State; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
ECONOMY
GDP: about $590 million (1976), $100 per capita; annual
real growth rate 5.8% (1973-76)
Agriculture: main crops-millet, sorghum, rice, corn,
peanuts; cash crops-peanuts, cotton, livestock
Fishing: catch 100,000 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: small local consumer goods and
processing
Electric power: 42,000 kW capacity (1977); 105 million
kWh produced (1977), 15 kWh per capita
Exports: $95 million (f.o.b., 1976); livestock, peanuts,
dried fish, cotton, skins
Imports: $113 million (c.i.f., 1976); textiles, vehicles,
petroleum products, machinery, and sugar
Major trade partners: mostly with franc zone and
Western Europe; also with U.S.S.R., China
Budget: 1976 balanced at $110 million
Monetary conversion rate: 485.38 Mali francs=US$1,
November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 642 km meter gage (1.00 m)
Highways: approximately 15,699 km total; 1,669 km
bituminous, 3,670 km gravel and improved earth, 10,360 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 1,815 km navigable
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 42 total, 38 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 11 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
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Telecommunications: domestic system poor and provides
only minimal service; open-wire and radiocommunication
used for long distance telecommunications; 78,000 tele-
phones (0.1 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, no FM, and no TV
stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean and 1 Indian Ocean satellite
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,364,000; 767,000 fit
for military service; no conscription
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $19,419,900; about 18% of central government budget
LAND
313 km2; 45% agricultural, negligible amount forested,
remainder urban, waste, or other (1965)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 20
nm)
Coastline: 140 km
PEOPLE
Population: 334,000 (official estimate for 31 August 1977)
Nationality: noun Maltese (sing. and pl. ); adjec-
tive Maltese
Ethnic divisions: mixture of Arab, Sicilian, Norman,
Spanish, Italian, British
Religion: 98% Roman Catholic
Language: English and Maltese
Literacy: about 83%; compulsory education introduced in
1946
Labor force: 119,554 (November 1977); 32% services
(except government), 18% government (except job corps),
5% job corps, 26% manufacturing, 6% agriculture, 3%
construction, 5% utilities and drydocks; 4% registered
unemployed
Organized labor: approximately 40% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Malta
Type: parliamentary democracy, independent republic
within the Commonwealth since December 1974
Capital: Valletta
Political subdivisions: 2 main populated islands, Malta
and Gozo, divided into 13 electoral districts (divisions)
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
adopted 1961, came into force 1964; has accepted compul-
sory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
Branches: executive, consisting of Prime Minister and
cabinet; legislative, comprising 65-member House of Repre-
sentatives; independent judiciary
National holiday: Republic Day, 13 December
Government leader: Prime Minister Dom Mintoff
Suffrage: universal over age 18; registration required
Elections: at the discretion of the Prime Minister, but
must be held before the expiration of a 5-year electoral
mandate; last election September 1976
Political parties and leaders: Nationalist Party, Edward
Fenech Adami; Malta Labor Party, Dom Mintoff
Voting strength (1976 election): Labor, 34 seats (51.54%);
Nationalist, 31 seats (48.43%)
Communists: less than 100 (est.)
Member of: Commonwealth, Council of Europe, FAO, C-
77, GATT, IBRD, ICAO, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, NAM,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $609 million (1977), $1,970 per capita; 72% private
consumption, 26% gross investment; 17% government
consumption, - 15% net foreign sector; in 1977 real GNP
growth was 9% (1977 prelim.); 12.5% (1971-76 average)
Agriculture: overall, 20% self-sufficient; adequate sup-
plies of vegetables, poultry, milk and pork products;
shortages in beef, grain, animal fodder, and fruits at various
seasons; main products-potatoes, cauliflowers, grapes,
wheat, barley, tomatoes, citrus, cut flowers, green peppers,
hogs, poultry, eggs; 2,680 calories per day per capita
Major industries: ship repair yard, clothing, building
industry, food manufacturing, textiles, tourism
Shortages: most consumer and industrial needs (fuels and
raw materials) must be imported
Electric power: 115,700 kW capacity (1977); 420 million
kWh produced (1977), 1,305 kWh per capita
Exports: $229 million (f.o.b., 1976); clothing, textiles,
ships, printed matter
Imports: $423 million (c.i.f., 1976)
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Major trade partners: 70% EC-nine (22% U.K., 15% West
Germany, 13% Italy); 7% U.S. (1976)
Aid: economic authorizations: U.S., $55 million (FY70-
76); other Western bilateral (ODA and OOF), $112 million
(1970-76); China, $45 million (1972); OPEC, $22 million
(1974-76)
Budget: (1978/79) projects $259 million in expenditures,
$237 million in revenues
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Maltese pound=US$2.37
(average 1977)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 1,271 km total; 1,159 km paved (asphalt), 77
km crushed stone or gravel, 35 km improved and
unimproved earth
Ports: 1 major (Valletta), 2 minor
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft, including 4 leased in
Airfields: 4 total, 2 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 1 with runway
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: modern automatic telephone sys-
tem centered in Valletta; 62,200 telephones (19.6 per 100
popl.); 1 TV, 5 AM, and 4 FM stations; 1 coaxial submarine
cable
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 91,000; 70,000 fit for
military service
Supply: has received 2 patrol boats, small arms, and
mortars from Libya; vehicles and engineer equipment from
Italy
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1978,
$11,032,210 (includes funds for Pioneer Corps and the Arms
of Malta, totaling about $8 million); about 6% of central
government budget
MARTINIQUE
LAND
1,100 km2; 31% cropland, 16% pasture, 29% forest, 24%
wasteland, built on
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 290 km
PEOPLE
Population: 327,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.2% (10-67 to 10-74)
Nationality: noun Martiniquais (sing. and pl.); adjective
Martiniquais
Ethnic divisions: 90% African and African-Caucasian-
Indian mixture, less than 5% East Indian Lebanese, Chinese,
5% Caucasian
DOMINICAN Atlantic Ocean
A REPUBLIC
MARTINIQUE a
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic, 5% Hindu and pagan
African
Language: French, Creole patois
Literacy: over 70%
Labor force: 100,000; 23% agriculture, 20% public
services, 11% construction and public works, 10% commerce
and banking, 10% services, 9% industry, 17% other
Organized labor: 11% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Department of Martinique
Type: overseas department of France; represented by 3
deputies in the French National Assembly and 2 Senators in
the Senate; incumbent deputies Aime Cesaire, Camille Petit,
and Victor Sable reelected to National Assembly, 12 March
1978
Capital: Fort-de-France
Political subdivisions: 2 arrondissements; 34 communes,
each with a locally elected municipal council
Legal system: French legal system; highest court is a court
of appeal based in Martinique with jurisdiction over
Guadeloupe, French Guiana, and Martinique
Branches: executive, Prefect appointed by Paris; legisla-
tive, popularly elected council of 36 members and a
Regional Council including all members of the local general
council and the locally elected deputies and senators to the
French parliament; judicial, under jurisdiction of French
judicial system
Government leader: Prefect Herve Bourseilleur
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: General Council elections normally are held
every five years; last General Council election took place in
March 1976; last local election held March 1977, last French
Presidential election May 1974
Political parties and leaders: Rassemblement Pour la
Republique (RPR), Emile Maurice; Progressive Party of
Martinique (PPM), Aime Cesaire; Communist Party of
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Martinique (PCM), Armand Nicolas; Democratic Union of
Martinique (UDM), Leon-Laurent Valere; Socialist Party,
leader unknown; Federation of the Left, leader unknown
Voting strength: RPR, 2 seats in French National
Assembly; PPM, 1 seat (1973 election)
Communists: 1,000 estimated
Other political or pressure groups: Proletarian Action
Group (GAP), Socialist Revolution Group (GRS)
ECONOMY
GNP: $769 million (1975 at current prices), $2,220 per
capita
Agriculture: bananas, sugarcane, and pineapples
Major industries: agricultural processing, particularly
sugar milling and rum distillation; cement, oil refining and
tourism
Electric power: 95,500 kW capacity (1977); 150 million
kWh produced (1977), 420 kWh per capita
Exports: $103 million (f.o.b., 1976); bananas, refined
petroleum products, rum, sugar, pineapples
Imports: $324 million (c.i.f., 1976); foodstuffs, clothing
and other consumer goods, raw materials and supplies, and
petroleum
Major trading partners: exports-82% France, 9% Italy,
9% other; imports-70% France, 6% United States, 3%
Netherlands Antilles, 3% Netherlands, 18% other (1968)
Monetary conversion rate: 4.75 French francs=US$1
(1976)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 1,450 km total; 1,000 km paved, 450 km
gravel and earth
Ports: 1 major ( Fort-de-France), 5 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 3 usable; 1 with permanent-surface runway; 1
with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: domestic facilities inadequate;
34,700 telephones (10.2 per 100 popl.); inter-island VHF and
UHF radio links; COMSAT ground station; 1 AM, 1 FM, and
5 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, included in France
MAURITANIA
LAND
1,085,210 km2; less than 1% suitable for crops, [0%
pasture, 90% desert
Land boundaries: 5,118 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 30 nm (fishing, 36
nm)
Coastline: 754 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,542,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (7-72 to 7-75)
Nationality: noun-Mauritanian(s); adjective- Mauri-
tanian
Ethnic divisions: nearly one third Moor, at least one third
Negro, one third mix Moor/Negro
Religion: nearly 100% Muslim
Language: Hassaniya Arabic is the national language
spoken by some 80% of the population, French is the
working language for government and commerce
Literacy: about 10%
Labor force: about 35,000 wage earners (1976); remain-
der of population in farming and herding; considerable
unemployment
Organized labor: 18,000 union members claimed by
single union, Mauritanian Workers' Union
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Islamic Republic of Mauritania
Type: republic; one-party presidential rule since 1960
Capital: Nouakchott
Political subdivisions: 12 regions and a capital district
NOTE: Mauritania has acquired administrative control of
the southern third of Western (formerly Spanish) Sahara
under an agreement with Morocco, but the legal question of
sovereignty over the area has yet to be determined. Spain's
role as co-administrator of the disputed territory ended
February 1976. The newly acquired region, which lies below
the 24th parallel, becomes the district of Tiris el Gharbia-a
territorial division of the state. The district's headquarters is
Dakhla, formerly Villa Cisneros. Tiris el Gharbia is
subdivided into three departments-Dakhla, Ausert, and
Aargub.
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MAURITANIA/MAURITIUS
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
Islamic law; constitution adopted 1961; judicial review of
legislative acts in the Supreme Court; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 28 November
Branches: executive,
pointed by president)
Government leader:
President; separate judiciary (ap-
Suffrage: universal for adults
Elections: presidential and parliamentary election every 5
years; most recent October 1975
Political parties and leaders: Mauritanian Peoples Party
is only legal party, Secretary General Moktar Ould Daddah
Communists: no Communist Party, but there is a
scattering of Maoist sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, AIOEC, Arab League, CEAO,
CIPEC (associate), EAMA, EIB (associate), FAO, G-77,
GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU,
ITU, NAM, OAU, OMVS (Organization for the Develop-
ment of the Senegal River Valley), U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: about 320 million (1975), $240 per capita, average
annual increase in current prices about 3.2% (1971-73)
Agriculture: most Mauritanians are nomads or subsistence
farmers; main products-livestock, small grains, dates; cash
crops-gum arabic; livestock
Fishing: catch, 34,170 metric tons; exports, 29,891 metric
tons (1975)
Major industries: mining of iron ore and copper, fishing
Electric power: 70,000 kW capacity (1977); 100 million
kWh produced (1977), 70 kWh per capita
Exports: $196 million (f.o.b., 1976); iron ore, fish, copper
Imports: $215 million (c.i.f., 1976); foodstuffs, capital
goods
Major trade partners: (trade figures not complete because
Mauritania has a form of customs union with Senegal and
much local trade unreported) France and other EC
members, U.K., and U.S. are main overseas partners
Budget: 1976 est. $139 million total expenditures, $11
million development expenditure included in $139 million
total, $149 million revenue
Monetary conversion rate: 46.12 Ouguiyas=US$1 as of
November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 650 km standard gage (1.435 m), single track,
privately owned
Highways: 6,090 km total; 558 km paved; 607 km gravel,
crushed stone, or otherwise improved; 4,925 km unimproved
Inland waterways: 800 km
Ports: 1 major (Nouadhibou), 2 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 29 total, 29 usable; 9 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m; 16 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: poor system of fragmentary open-
wire lines, a minor radio-relay link, and radiocommunica-
tions stations; 2,000 telephones (0.1 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, no
FM or TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 321,000; 153,000 fit for
military service; conscription law not implemented
Supply: primarily dependent on France; has also received
material from Algeria, Morocco, U.K., and Spain
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1976
(revised), $29 million; 22% of central government budget
MAURITIUS
LAND
1,856 km2 (excluding dependencies); 50% agricultural,
intensely cultivated; 39% forests, woodlands, mountains,
river, and natural reserves; 3% built-up areas; 5% water
bodies, 2% roads and tracks, 1% permanent wastelands
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 177 km
PEOPLE
Population: 918,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.3% (7-75 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Mauritian(s); adjective-Mauritian
Ethnic divisions: 67% Indians, 29% Creoles, 3.5%
Chinese, 0.5% English and French
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Religion: 51% Hindu, 33% Christian (mostly Catholic
with a few Anglican Protestants), 16% Muslim
Language: English official language; Hindi, Chinese,
French Creole
Literacy: estimated 60% for those over 21, and 90% for
those of school age
Labor force: 175,000; 50% agriculture, 6% industry; 20%
government services; 14% are unemployed, underemployed,
or self-employed, 10% other
Organized labor: about 35% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Mauritius
Type: independent state since 1968, recognizing Elizabeth
II as Chief of State
Capital: Port Louis
Political subdivisions: 5 organized municipalities and
various island dependencies
Legal system: based on French civil law system with
elements of English common law in certain areas; constitu-
tion adopted 6 March 1968
National holiday: Independence Day, 12 March
Branches: executive power exercised by Prime Minister
and 21-man Council of Ministers; unicameral legislature
(National Assembly) with 62 members elected by direct
suffrage, 8 specially elected
Government leader: Prime Minister Dr. Seewoosagur
Ramgoolam
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: legislative elections held in
municipal elections held in 1977
Political parties and leaders: a government coalition
consisting of Labor Party (S. Ramgoolam) and Parti
Mauricien Social Democrate (G. Duval); opposition parties-
Independent Forward Bloc (S. Bissoondoyal), Mauritius
Democratic Union (M. Lesage), Mouvement Militant Mauri-
tian (P. Berenger), Mouvement Militant Mauritian Socialiste
Progressist (D. Virahsawmy)
Voting strength: Mauritius Labor Party, 29 seats; Parti
Mauricien Social Democrate, 8 seats; Movement Militant
Mauritian, 32 seats; I independent
Communists: may be 2,000 sympathizers; several Com-
munist organizations; Mauritius Lenin Youth Organization,
Mauritius Women's Committee, Mauritius Communist
Party, Mauritius People%~ Progressive Party, Mauritius
Young Communist League, Mauritius Liberation Front,
Chinese Middle School Friendly Association, Mauri-
tius/USSR Friendship Society
Other political or pressure groups: Tamil United Party,
Mauritius Workers Party
Member of: Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, IWC-International
Wheat Council, NAM, OAU, OCAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $572 million (1976), $680 per capita; real growth
(1970-76), 6%
Agriculture: sugar crop is major economic asset; about
40% of land area is planted to sugar; most food imported-
rice is the staple food-and since cultivation is already
intense and expansion of cultivable areas is unlikely, heavy
reliance on food imports except sugar and tea will continue
Shortage: land
Industries: mainly confined to processing sugarcane, tea;
some small-scale, simple manufactures; tobacco fiber; some
fishing; tourism, diamond cutting, weaving and textiles,
electronics
Electric power: 81,000 kW capacity (1977); 312 million
kWh produced (1977), 340 kWh per capita
Exports: $300 million (f.o.b., est. 1977); mainly sugar, tea,
molasses
Imports: $339 million (c.i.f., est. 1977); foodstuffs 30%,
manufactured goods about 25%
Major trade partners: all EC-nine countries and U.S.
have preferential treatment, U.K. buys over 50% of
Mauritius' sugar export at heavily subsidized prices; small
amount of sugar exported to Canada, U.S., and Italy; imports
from U.K. and EC primarily, also from South Africa,
Australia, and Burma; some minor trade with China
Budget: revenues $172 million, current expenditures $168
million, investment expenditure $65 million (1976)
Monetary conversion rate: 6.7 Mauritian rupees=US$1
in August 1976 (floating with pound sterling)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 1,786 km total; 1,636 km paved, 150 km earth
Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft, including 2 leased in
Ports: I major (Port Louis)
Airfields: 6 total, 5 usable; 1 with permanent surface
runway; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m
Telecommunications: radio telegraph service with Re-
union, Malagasy Republic, Seychelles, Zanzibar, and other
places in Africa; 1 AM, no FM, and 4 TV stations; 26,500
telephones (2.9 per 100 pop].); 1 Indian Ocean Comsat
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 205,000; 106,000 fit for
military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1973,
$3,981,038; 6.5% of central government budget
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July 1978
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MEXICO
MEXICO
Gulf
of Mexico
MEXICO a
LAND
1,978,800 km?; 12% cropland, 40% pasture, 22% forested,
26% other (including waste, urban areas and public lands)
Land boundaries: 4,220 km
WATER (fishing 200
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
rim), 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 9,330 km
PEOPLE
Population: 65,833,000 (July
th rate 34% (current)
average annual
grow
: noun-Mexican(s); adjective-Mexican
Nationality
30% Indian
Ethnic divisions: 60% mestizo, or predomi
nantly Indian, 9% white or predominantly white, 1% other
Religion: 97% nominally Roman Catholic, 3% other
Language: Spanish
? 65% estimated; 84% claimed officially
National holiday: Independence Day, 16 September
Branches: dominant executive, bicameral legislature,
Supreme Court
Government leader: President Jose Lopez Portillo
Suffrage: universal over age 18; compulsory but
unenforced
Elections: congressional elections July 1979
Estitutional
Political parties and leaders: In Revolutionary
Party (PRI), Carlos Sansores Perez; National Action Party
(PAN), Manuel Gonzalez Hinoiosa; Popular Socialist Party
(ppS), Jorge Cruickshank Garcia; Authentic Party of the
Revolution (PARM), Pedro Gonzalez Azcuaga
Voting strength: 1976 presidential election: 98.7% PRI
(unopposed), 1.3% other; 1976 congressional election: 80.2%
PRI; 8.5% PAN; 5.8% other opposition (votes cast for PPS,
PARM, and unregistered candidates), 5.4% annulled
Communists: Mexican Communist Party (estimated
25,000) and other far-left parties seeking legal registration
under government's 1977 political reform program
Other political or pressure groups: Roman Catholic
Church, Confederation of Mexican Workers Con-
federation of Industrial Chambers (CONCAMIN), Confed-
eration of National Chambers of Commerce (CONCA-
NACO), National Cofederation of Campesinos (CNC),
National Confederation of Popular Organizations (CNOP),
Revolutionary Confederation of Workers and Peasants
(CROC)
Member of: FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC,
ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc
Study Group, IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITU, IWC-International
Whaling Commission, LAFTA, NAMUCAR (Carribean
Multinational Shipping Line-Navier UPMulttinHO Multinacional del
Caribe), OAS, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, WIPO,
WMO, WSG
Literacy
Labor force: 16.5 million (1977) (defined as those 12 years
of age and older); 39.5% agriculture, 16.7% manufacturing,
16.6% services, 16.8% construction, utilities, commerce, and
transport, 3% government, 7.4% unspecified activities; 9%
unemployed, 40% underemployed
organized labor: 20% of total labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United Mexican States
Type: federal republic operating in fact under a
centralized government
Capital: Mexico
Political subdivisions: 31 states, Federal District
Legal system: mixture of U.S. constitutional theory and
civil law system; constitution established in 1917; judicial
review of legislative acts; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdic-
tion, with reservations
ECONOMY
GDP: $72.5 billion (1977 est.), $1,160 per capita; 66%
private consumption, 16% public consumption, 13t private f investment, 7% public investment ( )s
balance - 2%; real growth rate 1977, 2.8% est.
Agriculture:
oilseeds, pulses, and vegetables; general
sugarcane, , sorghum,
self-sufficiency with minor exceptions in meat and dairy
t
products; caloric intake, 3,110 calories per day per
(1968) exports valued
Fishing: catch 515,000 metric tons (1976);
at $151.3 million, imports at $17.8 million (1975)
Major industries: processing of food, beverages, and
tobacco; chemicals, basic metals and metal products,
petroleum products, mining, textiles and clothing, and
transport equipment 5.5
Crude steel: 9.0 million metric tons capacity (1977); 5
million metric tons produced (1977)
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MEXICO/MONACO
Electric Power: 13,900,000 kW capacity (1977); 49.4
billion kWh produced (1977), 755 kWh per capita
Exports: $4,596 million (f.o.b., 1977); cotton, coffee,
nonferrous minerals (including lead and zinc), sugar, shrimp,
petroleum, sulfur, salt, cattle and meat, fresh fruit, tomatoes,
machinery and equipment
Imports: $5,487.5 million (c.i.f., 1977); machinery,
equipment, industrial vehicles, and intermediate goods
Major trade partners: exports-63% U.S., 5% EC, 2%
Japan (1977); imports-64% U.S., 15% EC, 5% Japan
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $119
million in loans; $165 million in grants; from international
organizations (FY46-76), $3,357 million; from other Western
countries (1960-66), $122.7 million; military-assistance
from U
S
(FY46
.
.
-76), $14 million
Budget: 1978 federal, revenues
expenditures $634 billion pesos
$434 billion pesos,
Monetary conversion rate: floating
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 19,680 km total; 18,576 km standard gage
(1.435 m); 1,104 km narrow gage (0.914 m); 102 km
electrified; 19,573 km government-owned, 107 km
privately-owned
Highways: 175,500 km total; 74,000 km paved, 85,500
km otherwise improved, 16,000 km unimproved
Inland waterways: 2,900 km navigable rivers and coastal
canals
Pipelines: crude oil, 3,910 km; refined products, 3,490
km; natural gas, 5,710 km
Ports: 9 major, 20 minor
in) Civil air: 128 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
Airfields: 2,015 total, 1,959 usable; 140 with permanent-
surface runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 21 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 270 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 9
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: highly developed telecom system
with extensive radio-relay links; connection into Central
American microwave net; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite ground
station; 3.31 million telephones (5.2 per 100 pop].); 574 AM,
109 FM, and 163 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 13,867,000; 10,558,000
fit for military service; average number reaching military
age (18) annually, 738,000
Military budget: for year ending 31 December 1978,
$632.8 million; about 2.9% of direct federal budget (includes
merchant marine and military industry)
MONACO
LAND
1.5 km2
Land boundaries: 3.7 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed):
Coastline: 4.1 km
PEOPLE
Population: 25,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1976)
Nationality: noun-Monacan(s) or Monegasque(s); adjec-
tive-Monacan or Monegasque
Ethnic divisions: Rhaetian stock
Religion: Roman Catholicism
Language: French
Literacy: almost complete
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Principality of Monaco
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Monaco
Political subdivisions: 4 sections
Legal system: based on French law; new constitution
adopted 1962; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
Nati
l
ona
holiday: 19 November
Branches: National Council (18 members);
Council (15 members, headed by a mayor)
Government leader: Prince Rainier III
Suffrage: universal
Elections: National Council every 5 years; most recent
1978
Political parties and leaders: National Democratic
Entente, Democratic Union Movement, Monegasque Action-
ist (1973)
Voting strength: figures for 1978: National Democratic
Entente, 18 seats
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Member of: IAEA, IHO, IPU, ITU, U.N. (permanent
observer), UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: 55% tourism; 25%-30% industry (small and primar-
ily tourist oriented); 10%-15% registration fees and sales of
postage stamps; about 4% traceable to the Monte Carlo
casino
Major industries: chemicals, food processing, precision
instruments, glassmaking, printing
Electric power: 8,000 (standby) kW capacity (1977); 100
million kWh supplied by France (1977)
Trade: full customs integration with France, which
collects and rebates Monacan trade duties
Monetary conversion rate: 1 franc=US$0.2102 (1977
average)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1.6 km of 1.435 m gage
Highways: none; city streets
Ports: 1 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: none
Telecommunications: served by the French communica-
tions system; automatic telephone system with about 23,700
telephones (96.5 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, 4 FM, and 3 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
France responsible for defense
MONGOLIA
LAND
1,564,619 km2; almost 90% of land area is pasture or desert
wasteland, varying in usefulness, less than 1% arable, 10%
forested
Land boundaries: 8,000 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,587,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Mongolian(s); adjective-Mongolian
Ethnic divisions: 90% Mongol, 4% Kazakh, 2% Chinese,
2% Russian, 2% other
Religion: predominantly Tibetan Buddhist, about 4%
Muslim, limited religious activity because of Communist
regime
Languages: Khalkha Mongol used by over 90% of
population; minor languages include Turkic, Russian, and
Chinese
Literacy: about 80%
Labor force: primarily agricultural, over half the
population is in the labor force, including a large percentage
of Mongolian women; shortage of skilled labor (no reliable
information available)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Mongolian People's Republic
Type: Communist state
Capital: Ulaanbaatar
Political subdivisions: 18 provinces and 2 autonomous
municipalities (Ulaanbaatar and Darhan)
Legal system: blend of Russian, Chinese, and Turkish
systems of law; new constitution adopted 1960; no constitu-
tional provision for judicial review of legislative acts; legal
education at Ulaanbaatar State University; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: People's Revolution Day, 11 July
Branches: constitution provides for a People's Great
Mural (national assembly) and a highly centralized
administration
Party and government leaders: Y. Tsedenbal, First
Secretary of the MPRP and Chairman of the Presidium of
the People's Great Hural; J. Batmunh, Chairman of the
Council of Ministers
Suffrage: universal; age 18 and over
Elections: national assembly elections held every 4 years;
last election held June 1977
Political party: Mongolian People's Revolutionary (Com-
munist) Party (MPRP); estimated membership, 67,000
(1976)
Member of: CEMA, ESCAP, IAEA, ILO, IPU, ITU, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
Agriculture: livestock raising predominates; main crops-
wheat, oats, barley
Industries: processing of animal products; building
materials; mining
Electric power: 332,000 kW capacity (1977); 995 million
kWh produced (1977), 637 kWh per capita
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Exports: beef for slaughter meat products, wool, fluorspar,
other minerals
Imports: machinery and equipment, petroleum, clothing,
building materials, sugar, and tea
Major trade partners: nearly all trade with Communist
countries (approx. 85% with U.S.S.R.); total turnover about
$900 million (1976)
Aid: heavily dependent on U.S.S.R.
Monetary conversion rate: 3.30 tugriks=US$I (arbitrar-
ily established)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,516 km; all broad gage (1.524 m) (1976)
Inland waterways: 616 km of principal routes (1975)
Freight carried: rail-6.9 million metric tons, 3,150
million metric ton/km (1975); highway-13.9 million metric
tons, 953 million metric ton/km; waterway-0.05 million
metric tons, 0.04 billion metric ton/km (1975)
DEFENSE FORCES
Supply: military equipment supplied by U.S.S.R.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, 405 million tugriks, 12% of total budget
MOROCCO
ERN
WEST
SAHARA
Rabat
LAND
409,200 kmz; about 32% arable and grazing land, 17%
forest and esparto, 51% desert, waste, and urban
Land boundaries: 1,996 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (200 nm
exclusive economic zone)
Coastline: 1,835 km
PEOPLE
Population: 18,915,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.0% (7-75 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Moroccan(s); adjective-Moroccan
Ethnic divisions: 99.1% Arab-Berber, 0.2% Jewish, 0.7%
non-Moroccan
Religion: 98.7% Muslim, 1.1% Christian, 0.2% Jewish
Language: Arabic (official); several Berber dialects;
French is language of much business, government, diplo-
macy, and postprimary education
Literacy: 20%
Labor force: 5 million (1977 est.); 50% agriculture, 15%
industry, 26% services, 9% other; 10-20% unemployment
Organized labor: about 5% of the labor force, mainly in
the Union of Moroccan Workers (UMT)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Morocco
Type: constitutional monarchy (constitution adopted
1972)
Capital: Rabat
Political subdivisions: 33 provinces and 2 prefectures
NOTE: Morocco has acquired administrative control over
the northern two-thirds of the former Spanish Sahara under
an agreement with Mauritania, but the legal question of
sovereignty over the area has yet to be determined. Spain's
role as co-administrator of the disputed territory ended in
February 1976. Rabat has established three provinces in its
area of control, with headquarters at El Aaiun, Semara, and
Cabo Bojador.
Legal system: based on Islamic law and French and
Spanish civil law system; judicial review of legislative acts in
Constitutional Chamber of Supreme Court; modern legal
education at branches of Mohamed V University in Rabat
and Casablanca and Karaouine University in Fes; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 3 March
Branches: constitution provides for Prime Minister and
ministers named by and responsible to King; King has
paramount executive powers; unicameral legislature two-
thirds directly elected, one-third indirectly; judiciary inde-
pendent of other branches
Government leaders: King Hassan II; Prime Minister
Ahmed Osman
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: local elections held 12 November 1976;
provincial elections held 25 January 1977; elections for new
National Assembly provided for in Constitution adopted 15
March 1972 were held June 1977
Political parties and leaders: Istiqlal Party, Mohamed
Boucetta; Popular Movement (MP), Mahioubi Aherdan;
Constitutional and Democratic Popular Movement (MPCD),
Dr. Abdelkrim Khatib; National Union of Popular Forces
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MOROCCO/MOZAMBIQUE
(UNFP), split into competitive factions under Abdallah
Ibrahim and Mahioub Ben Seddik of Casablanca-based
faction and Abderrahim Bouabid of Rabat-based faction
with latter becoming Socialist Union of Popular Forces
(USFP) in September 1974; Democratic Constitutional Party
(PDC), Mohamed Hassan Ouazzani; Party for Progress and
Socialism (PPS), legalized in August 1974, successor to Party
of Liberation and Socialism (PLS), is front for Moroccan
Communist Party (MCP), which was proscribed in 1.959, Ali
Yata; Istiglal and the UNFP formed a National Front in July
1970 to oppose the new constitution, boycotted the
parliamentary elections and the 1972 constitutional
referendum
Voting strength: pro-government independents old
absolute majority in new National Assembly; with palace-
oriented Popular Movement deputies, the government holds
over two-thirds of the seats
Communists: 300 est.
Member of: AFDB, Arab League, EC (association until
1974), FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF,
IOOC, IPU, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO> WMO
CONOMY
Pipelines: 362 km crude oil; 491 km (abandoned) refined
products; 241 km natural gas
Ports: 8 major (including Spanish-controlled Ceuta and
Melilla), 10 minor
Civil air: 21 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 77 total, 77 usable; 26 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 13 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 30 with runways 1,220-2,439 in; 4 seaplane
stations
Telecommunications: good system by African standards
composed of open-wire lines, coaxial, multiconductor and
submarine cables and radio-relay links; principal centers
Casablanca and Rabat, secondary centers Fes, Marrakech,
Oujda, Sebaa Aioun, Tangier and Tetouan; 199,000 tele-
phones (1.1 per 100 popl.); 25 AM, 4 FM, 27 TV stations; 3
submarine cables; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,996,000; 2,372,000 fit
for military service; about 211,000 reach military age (18)
annually; limited conscription
MOZAMBIQUE
Jul GNP: $9.5 billion (1977), about $500 per capita; average
annual real growth 4% during 1970-73, 9% in 1974, under
3% in 1975-77
Agriculture: cereal farming and livestock? raising
fruit, main products-wheat, barley,
vegetables, olives; some fishing $64.5
Fishing: catch 210,479 metric tons (1975); exports
million (1975)
Major sectors: mining and mineral processing (phos-
phates, smaller quantities of iron, manganese, lead, zinc, and
other minerals), food processing, textiles, construction and
tourism
Electric power: 938,000 kW capacity (1977); 3.3 billion
kWh produced (1977), 180 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,261 million (f.o.b., 1976); 55% phosphates,
25% agricultural goods, 20% other
Imports: $3.1 billion (c.i.f., 1977); 40% raw material and
semi-finished goods, 25% food, 20% equipment, 15%
consumer goods Italy
Major trade partners: France, West Germany,
Monetary conversion rate: 4.5 dirhams=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,756 km standard gage (1.435 m), 161 km
double track; 708 km electrified
Highways: 57,200 km total; 23,860 km bituminous
treated, 4,020 km gravel, crushed stone, and improved earth,
29,320 km unimproved earth
Land
786,762 km2; 30% arable, of which 1% cultivated, 56%
woodland and forest, 14% wasteland and inland water
Land boundaries: 4,627 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (200 nm
exclusive economic zone)
Coastline: 2,470 km
PEOPLE
Population: 9,866,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
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MOZAMBIOUE/NAMIBIA
Nationality: noun-Mozambican(s); adjective-
Mozam-bique
Ethnic divisions: over 99% native African, less than 1%
European and Asian
Religion: 65.6% animist, 21.5% Christian, 10.5% Muslim,
2.4% other
Language: Portuguese (official);
Literacy: 7%-10% (est.)
Labor force: (1963 est.) 610,000; 50,000 non-African wage
earners, 560,000 African wage earners in Mozambique;
290,000 additional African wage earners temporarily work-
ing in Rhodesia and South Africa; unemployment serious
problem; most native Africans provide unskilled labor or
remain in subsistence agricultural sector
Organized labor: approx. 47,000 (end of 1970); 75% are
white
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Republic of Mozambique
Type: peoples republic; achieved independence from
Portugal in June 1975
Capital: Maputo
Political subdivisions: 10 districts administered by
district governors; municipalities governed by appointed
official
Legal system: based on Portuguese civil law system and
customary law
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 June
Branches: none established
Government leader: President Samora Machel
Suffrage: not yet established
Elections: information not available on future election
schedule
Political parties and leaders: the Mozambique Liber-
ation Front (FRELIMO), led by Samora Machel, is only
legal party
Communists: none known
Member of: G-77, ILO, NAM, OAU, U.N.
ECONOMY
GNP: $2.0 billion (1975 est.), about $220 per capita;
average annual growth probably negative in 1975-77
Agriculture: cash crops-raw cotton, cashew nuts, sugar,
tea, copra, sisal; other crops-corn, wheat, peanuts, potatoes,
beans, sorghum, and cassava; self-sufficient in food except
for wheat which must be imported
Major industries: food processing (chiefly sugar, tea,
wheat, flour, cashew kernels); chemicals (vegetable oil,
oilcakes, soap, paints); petroleum products; beverages;
textiles; nonmetallic mineral products (cement, glass, asbes-
tos, cement products); tobacco
Electric power: 1,664,000 kW capacity (1977); 4.6 million
kWh produced (1977), 470 kWh per capita
Exports: $155 million (1977 est.); cashew nuts, cotton,
sugar, mineral products, timber products, tea, copra
Imports: $420 million (1977 est.); machinery and electri-
cal equipment, cotton textiles, vehicles, petroleum products,
wine, iron and steel
Major trade partners: Portugal, South Africa, U.S., U.K.,
West Germany
Aid: mainly from PRC, U.S., U.K., Eastern Europe, USSR
Budget: (FY76) expenditures, $310 million, revenues,
$237 milli
on
Monetary conversion
November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar
COMMUNICATIONS
rate: 40.643 escudos=US$1 as of
Railroads: 3,161 km total; 3,020 km 1.067-meter gage;
141 km narrow gage (0.750 m)
Highways: 26,477 km total; 4
322 km
d
,
pave
; 607 km
improved earth; 21,548 km unimproved earth, unconnected
Inland waterways: approx. 3,750 km of navigable routes
Pipelines: crude oil, 306 km (not operating)
Ports: 3 major (Maputo, Beira, Nacala), 2 significant
minor
Civil air: 13 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 330 total, 320 usable; 29 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 6 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 36 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecomunications: fair system of troposcatter, open-
wire lines,m and radiocommunications; principal centers
Maputo, Beira, and Nampula; 52,200 telephones (0.5 per 100
pop].); 10 AM, 2 FM, no TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,280,000; 1,181,000 fit
for military service
Supply: mostly from the USSR and PRC, and to a lesser
extent from other Communist countries and Portugal
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $63.3 million; 18% of central government budget
NAMIBIA
(South-West Africa)
LAND
823,620 km2; mostly desert except for interior plateau and
area along northern border
Land boundaries: 3,798 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 1,489 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 964,000
% ( -rent)
cu
9
NAMIBIA
Suffrage: franchise for Legislative Assembly limited to
white adults; several tribal homelands have adult franchise
for homeland legislatures
Elections: last general election, 1974
Political parties and leaders: white parties-National
Party of South-West Africa (NPSWA), Abraham H.
du Plessis; Federal Party, Bryan O'Linn; Republican Party,
Dirk Mudge; most of the nonwhite parties belong to one of
two muli-ethnic alliances-the Democratic Turnhalle Alli-
ance (the traditional tribal leaders and the white Republican
Party) or the Namibian National Front (the white Federal
Party and nonwhite groups that oppose the
system)
Voting strength: (1974 election) NPSWA won all 18 seats
in Legislative Assembly lla
(July 1978), average annual growth
o
rate 2.
Nationality: noun-Namibian(s); adjective-Namibian
Ethnic divisions: 12% white, 6% mulatto, 82% African;
over half the Africans belong to Ovambo tribe
Religion: whites predominantly Christian, nonwhites
either animist or Christian
Language: Afrikaans principal language of about 70% of
white population, German of 22% and English of 8%; several
es
l
anguag
African
Literacy: high for white population; low for nonwhite
Labor force: 203,300 (total of economically active, fishing
68% agriculture, 15% railroads, 13% mining, 4%
Organized labor: no trade unions, although some white
wage earners belong to South African unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Namibia
Type: former German colony of South-West Africa
mandated to South Africa by League of Nations in 1920;
U.N. formally ended South Africa's mandate on October 27,
1966, but South Africa has retained administrative control
Capital: Windhoek
Political subdivisions: 10 tribal homelands, mostly in
northern sector, and zone open to white settlement with
administrative subdivisions similar to a province of South
Africa
Legal system: based on Roman-Dutch law and customary
law
Branches: since September 1977 an administrator-gen-
eral, appointed by South African government, has exercised
coordinative functions over zone of white settlement, where
white-elected Legislative Assembly handles some local
matters, and tribal homelands, where traditional chiefs and
representative bodies exercise limited autonomy
Government leader: Martinus T. Steyn, Administrator-
general
Communists: no Communist Party, SWAPO guerre
force is supported by U.S.S.R., Cuba, and other Communist
states as well as OAU
Other political or pressure groups: South-West Africa
People's Organization (SWAPO), led by Sam Nujoma,
maintains a foreign-based guerrilla movement; is predomi-
nantly Ovambo but has some influence among other tribes;
is the only Namibian group recognized by the U.N. General
Assembly and the Organization of African Unity
ECONOMY
Agriculture: livestock raising (cattle and sheep) predomi-
nates, subsistence crops (millet, sorghum, corn, and some
wheat) are raised but most food must be imported
Fishing: catch 86,650 metric tons (1975) (processed
mostly in South African enclave of Walvis Bay)
Major industries: meatpacking, fish processing, copper,
lead, diamond, and uranium mining, dairy products
1,040
Electric power: 297,400 kW capacity (1977); 1,0
per capita
million kWh produced (1977), 1,095
Aid: South Africa is only donor
Monetary conversion rate: 187 outh RAnd=an R and=
US$1.15 (as of March 1978); 0
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,326 km 1.067-meter gage, single track
Highways: 3,400 km; 2,680 km paved, remainder gravel,
remainder earth roads and tracks
Ports: 2 major (Walvis Bay and Luderitz)
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft (registered in South
Africa)
Airfields: 113 total, 86 usable; 13 with permanent-surface
runways
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m; 3 with 2,440-3,659 m, 34 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: sparse system of open wire and
radio relay routes; out-lying areas connected by radiocom-
munication; Windhoek is the only M porAcenand 46 TV
telephones (6.2 per 100 popl.);
stations
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NAMIBIA/NAUR U/NF.PAI,
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 221,000; about
128,000 fit for military service
Defense is responsibility of Republic of South Africa
NAURU
LAND
21.2 km2; insignificant arable land, no urban areas,
extensive phosphate mines
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 non
Coastline: 24 km
PEOPLE
Population: 7,000 (official estimate for 30 June 1969)
Nationality: noun-Nauruan(s); adjective-Nauruan
Ethnic divisions: 48% Nauruans, 19% Chinese, 7%
Europeans, 26% other Pacific Islanders
Religion: Christian (two-thirds Protestant, one-third
Catholic)
Language: Nauruan, a distinct Pacific Island tongue;
English, the language of school instruction, spoken and
understood by nearly all
Literacy: nearly universal
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Nauru
Type: republic; independent since January 1968
Capital: no capital city per se; government offices in
Yeran District
Political subdivisions: 14 districts
Branches: President elected from and by Parliament for
an unfixed term; popularly elected 18-member unicameral
legislature, the Parliament; Cabinet to assist the President,
four members, appointed by President from Parliament
members
Government leader: President Lagumot Harris
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: last held in November 1977
Political parties and leaders: Nauru Party, President
f larris, opposition faction, ex-President De Roburt
Member of: no present plans to join U
N
"
.
.; enjoys
special
membership" in Commonwealth; South Pacific Commission,
ESCAP, INTERPOL, ITU, UPU
ECONOMY
GNP: over $120 million (1975), $17,140 per capita (est.)
Agriculture: negligible; almost completely dependent on
imports for food, water
Major industries: mining of phosphates, about 2 million
tons per year
Electric power: 9,000 kW capacity (1977); 26 million
kWh Produced (1977), 3,715 kWh per capita
Exports: $120 million (f.o.b., 1975 est.); consisting entirely
of phosphates
Imports: $5 million (c.i.f., FY70)
Major trade partners: exports-7 5% Australia and New
Zealand: imports-Australia, U.K., New Zealand, Japan
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Australian dol-
lar=US$1.2375 (July 1976)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: about 27 km total; 21 km paved, 6 km
improved earth
Inland waterways: none
Ports: I minor
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1, coral-surfaced, over 1,220 m
Telecommunications: adequate intraisland and interna-
tional radiocommunications provided via Australian facili-
ties; 700 telephones; 3,600 radio receivers, 1 AM, no FM and
no TV stations; 1 ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 1,800; fit for
military service, about 1,000; average number reaching
military age (18) annually, 1975-79, less than 100
No formal defense structure and no regular armed forces
NEPAL
LAND
141,400 km2; 16% agricultural area, 14% permanent
meadows and pastures, 38% alpine land (unarable), waste, or
urban; 32% forested
Land boundaries: 2,800 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 13,680,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Nepalese
Nepalese
(sing. and pl.); adjective-
Ethnic divisions: two main categories, Indo-Nepalese
(about 80%) and Tibeto-Nepalese (about 20%), representing
considerable intermixture of Indo-Aryan and Mongolian
racial strains; country divided among many quasi-tribal
communities
Religion: only official Hindu Kingdom in world, although
no sharp distinction between many Hindu and Buddhist
groups; small groups of Muslims and Christians
Language: 20 mutually unintelligible languages divided
into numerous dialects; Nepali official language and lingua
franca for much of the country; same script as Hindi
Literacy: about 12%
Labor force: 4.1 million; 95% agriculture, 5% industry;
great lack of skilled labor
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Nepal
Type: constitutional monarchy; King Birendra exercises
autocratic control over multitiered panchayat system of
government
Capital: Kathmandu
Political subdivisions: 75 districts, 14 zones
Legal system: based on Hindu legal concepts and English
common law; legal education at Nepal Law College in
Kathmandu; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Birthday of the King, 28 December
Branches: Council of Ministers appointed by the King;
indirectly elected National Panchayat (Assembly)
Government leaders: King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah
Deva; Prime Minister Kirtinidhi Bista
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: village and town councils (panchayats) elected
by universal suffrage; district, zonal, and National Pan-
chayat members indirectly elected, most for 6-year terms; 15
National Panchayat members elected from five class and
professional organizations (women, workers, peasants, youth,
and ex-servicemen), four directly elected by all voters
possessing a B.A. or its equivalent, and 16 are appointed by
the King
Political
outlawed
parties and leaders: all political parties
Communists: the combined membership of the two wings
of the Communist Party of Nepal (CPN) about 6,500, the
majority (perhaps 5,000) in the pro-Chinese wing; the CPN
continues to operate more or less openly, but internal
dissension has greatly hindered its effectiveness
Other political or pressure groups: proscribed Nepali
Congress Party led by B. P. Koirala
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, FAO, G-77, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $1.3 billion (FY77, at current prices), $100 per
capita; 1% real growth in FY77
Agriculture: over 90% of population engaged in agricul-
ture; main crops-rice, corn, wheat, sugarcane, oilseeds
Major industries: small rice, jute, sugar, and oilseed mills;
match, cigarette, and brick factories
Electric power: 60,600 kW capacity (1977); 144 million
kWh produced (1977), 10 kWh per capita
Exports: $94 million est. (FY77); rice and other food
products, jute, timber
Imports: $160 million est. (FY77); manufactured con-
sumer goods, fuel, construction materials, food products
Major trade partner: over 80% India
Aid: economic commitments 1970-76: U.S.S.R., $3 mil-
lion; China, $118 million; OPEC, $18.1 million; U.S., $69
million; $48 million disbursements 1977
Budget: (FY77 est.) domestic revenues $106 million,
expenditures $190 million
Monetary conversion rate: 12 Nepalese rupees=US$l
basic rate; 16NR=US$1 for some non-Indian commodity
trade (April 1978)
Fiscal year: 15 July-14 July
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 169 km, all narrow gage (0.762 m); mostly
government owned; all in Terai close to Indian border; only
53 km sector from border to Bizalpura presently in use; a 45
km segment has been abandoned and 71 km utilized to
transport rock from quarry near Dharau to Kosi Dam near
Rajbiras
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Highways: 3,700 km total; 1,666 km paved, 533 km
gravel or crushed stone, 1,501 km improved and unim-
proved earth; additionally 322 km of seasonally motorable
tracks
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 52 total, 51 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 7 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: poor telephone and telegraph
service; good radiocommunication and broadcast service;
international radiocommunication service is poor; 14,000
telephones (0.1 per 100 pop1.); 3 AM, no FM, and no TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 14 July 1978,
$13.9 million; 5.6% of central government budget
NETHERLANDS
LAND
33,929 km2; 70% cultivated, 5% waste, 8% forested, 8%
inland water, 9% other
Land boundaries: 1,022 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing, 12
nm)
Coastline: 451 km
PEOPLE
Population: 13,929,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 0.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Netherlander(s); adjective-Nether-
lands
Ethnic divisions: 99% Dutch, 1% Indonesian and other
Religion: 41% Protestant, 40% Roman Catholic, 19%
unaffiliated
Language: Dutch
Literacy: 98%
Labor force: 4.7 million; 30% manufacturing, 24%
services, 16% commerce, 10% agriculture, 9% construction,
7% transportation and communications, 4% other; 5.1%
unemployment, March 1977
Organized labor: 33% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of the Netherlands
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Amsterdam, but government resides at The
Hague
Political subdivisions: 11 provinces governed by centrally
appointed commissioners of Queen
Legal system: civil law system incorporating French
penal theory; constitution of 1815 frequently amended,
reissued 1947; judicial review in the Supreme Court of
legislation of lower order than Acts of Parliament; legal
education at six law schools; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Birthday of the Queen, 30 April
Branches: executive (Queen and Cabinet of Ministers),
which is responsible to bicameral States General (parlia-
ment); independent judiciary
Government leaders: Head of State, Queen Juliana;
Andreas van Agt, Prime Minister
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: must be held at least every 4 years for lower
house (most recent held May 1977), and every 3 years for
half of upper house (most recent July 1977)
Political parties and leaders: Catholic People's Party
(KVP), W. J. Vergeer; Antirevolutionary (ARP), H. A.
de Boer; Labor (PvdA), Mrs. C. (len) van den Heuvel;
Liberal (VVD), F. Korthals Altes; Christian Historical Union
(CHU), Otto W. A. Baron van Verschuer; Democrats '66
(D-66), F. Eenstra; Communist (CPN), Henk Hoekstra;
Pacifist Socialist (PSP), Lamber Meertens; Political Re-
formed (SGP), H. G. Abma; Reformed Political Union
(GVP), G. Veurink; Radical Party (PPR), Wisnand Van
Iloogevest; Democratic Socialist '70 (DS-70), H. Staneke;
Farmers' Party (BP), Hendrik Koekoek; Christian Demo-
cratic Appeal (CDA), coalition of KVP, ARP, and CHU
formed prior to 1977 elections
Voting strength (1977 election): 33.81% PvdA, 31.91%
CDA, 17.95% VVD, 5.43% D'66, 2.13% SGP, 1.73% CPN,
1.69% PPR, 0.96% GPV, 0.94% PSP, 0.84% BP, 0.72% DS'70
Communists: 13,000 est. members
144
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July 1978
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NETHERLANDS/NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
Other political or pressure groups: great multinational
firms; Socialist, Catholic, and Protestant trade unions;
Federation of Catholic and Protestant Employers Associ-
ations; the non-denominational Federation of Netherlands
Enterprises
Member of: ADB, Benelux, Council of Europe, DAC,
FAO,
ECE, EEC, EIB, ELDO, EMA, ESRO, EURATOM,
GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC,
IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council (with respect to interests of the Netherlands Antilles
and Surinam), NATO, OAS (observer), OECD, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WEU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $105.3 billion (1977 est. in 1977 prices), $7,583 per
capita; 57.7% consumption, 21.7% investment, 17.6% gov-
ernment, 2.7% foreign balance; 0.3% net income from
b d
Highways: 104,236 km total; 86,110 km paved (including
1,450 km of limited access, divided "Motorways");
km gravel, crushed stone
Inland waterways: 6,340 km, of which 35% is usable by
craft of 900 metric ton capacity or larger
Pipelines: 418 km crude oil; 965 km refined products;
4,489 km natural gas
Ports: 8 major, 5 minor
Civil air: 107 major transport aircraft (including 3 leased
out and 2 leased in)
Airfields: 29 total, 28 usable; 16 with permanent-surface
runways; 13 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 3 with runways
1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: highly developed, well maintained,
and integrated; extensive system of multiconductor cables,
supplemented by radio-relay links; 5.41 million telephones
(39.2 per 100 popl.); 6 AM, 19 FM, and 16 TV stations; 12
coaxial submarine cables; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,454,000; 3,099,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(20) annually 118,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $4.2866 million; about 9.5% of central
government budget
a roa
Agriculture: animal husbandry predominates; main
crops-horticultural crops, grains, potatoes, sugar beets; food
shortages-grains, fats, oils; calorie intake, 3,186 calories per
day per capita (1970-71)
Fishing: catch 256,000 metric tons, $174 million (1976);
exports 204,628 metric tons, imports 131,070 metric tons
(1976)
Major industries: food processing, metal and engineering
products, electrical and electronic machinery and equip-
ment, chemicals, petroleum products, and natural gas
Shortages: crude petroleum, raw cotton, base metals and
ores, pulp, pulpwood, lumber, feedgrains, and oilseeds
Crude steel: 7.7 million metric ton capacity; 5.2 million
metric tons produced (1976), 380 kg per capita
Electric power: 16,800,000 kW capacity (1977); 63 billion
kWh produced (1977), 4,535 kWh per capita
Exports: $43.7 billion (f.o.b., 1977); foodstuffs, machinery,
chemicals, petroleum products, natural gas, textiles
Imports: $45.6 billion (c.i.f., 1977); machinery, transpor-
tation equipment, crude petroleum, foodstuffs, chemicals,
raw cotton, base metals and ores, pulp
Major trade partners: (1977) 62.2% EC, 27.6% West
Germany, 13.1% Belgium-Luxembourg,
Aid: donar: bilateral economic aid authorized, $2,731
million (1970-76)
Budget: (1978 est.) revenues $34.1 billion, expenditures
$39.2 billion, deficit $5.1 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 2.4543
age 1977 floating
Fiscal year: calendar year
TIONS
guilders=US$1, aver-
COMMUNICA 813 km
Railroads: 2,979 km standard gage (1.435 m); 2,813
government-owned (NS), 1,638 km electrified, 1,556 km
double track; 166 km privately-owned
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
LAND
1,020 km2; 5% arable, 95% waste, urban, or other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 364 km
PEOPLE
Population: 247,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.2% (1-75 to 1-76)
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NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
Nationality: noun-Netherlands Antillean(s); adjective-
Netherlands Antillean
Ethnic divisions: racial mixture with African, Caribbean
Indian, European, Latin, and oriental influences; negroid
characteristics are dominant on Curacao, Indian on Aruba
Religion: Predominantly Roman Catholic; sizable Protes
tant, smaller Jewish minorities
Language: officially Dutch; Papiamento, a Spanish-
Portuguese-Dutch-English dialect predominates; English
widel
k
y spo
en
Literacy: 95%
Labor force: 76,000 (1972); 2% agriculture, 20% industry,
10% construction, 65% government and services, 3% other
Organized labor: 60%-70% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Netherlands Antilles
Type: territory within Kingdom of
enjoying complete domestic autonomy
Capital: Willemstad, Curacao
the Netherlands,
Political subdivisions: 4 island territories-Aruba, Bon-
aire, Curacao, and the Windward Islands-St. Eustatius,
southern part of St. Martin (northern part is French), Saba
Legal system: based on Dutch civil law system, with some
English common law influence; Constitution adopted 1954
Branches: federal executive power rests nominally with
Governor (appointed by the Crown), actual power exercised
by 8-member Council of Ministers or Cabinet presided over
by Minister-President; legislaxive power rests with 22-mem-
ber Legislative Council; independent court system under
control of Chief Justice of Supreme Court of Justice
(administrative functions under Minister of Justice); each
island territory has island council headed by Lieutenant
Governor
Government leader: Minister-President Silvo G. M.
Rozendal
Suffrage: universal age 18 and over
Elections: Federal elections held every 4 years, last held
17 June 1977; Island council elections every 4 years, last held
April and May 1975
Political parties and leaders: political parties are
indigenous to each island:
Curacao: Democratic Party (DP), S. G. M. Rozendal;
National People's Party-United (NVP-U) Edsel Jenerun;
Frente Obrero de Liberation' 30 di Mayo (FOL), Wilson
"Papa" Godett; Social Democratic Party (PSD), R. J. Isa
Aruba: People's Electoral Movement (MEP), G. F.
"Betico" Croes; Aruban Patriotic Party (PPA), L. O. Chance;
Aruban People's Party (AVP), D. G. Croes
Bonaire: Labor Party (POB); Democratic Party Bonaire
(UPB); New Democratic Action (ADEN)
Windward Islands: Windward Islands Democratic
Party (DPWI); United Federation of Antillean Workers
(UFA); Windward Islands Political Movement (WIPM); and
others
Voting strength: (1977 federal election) 6 seats DP, 5 seats
MEP, 3 seats FOL, 3 seats NVP, 3 seats PPA, 1 seat DPWI, I
seat UPB
Communists: no Communist Party
Member of: EC (associate), WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $413 million (1975 est.), $1,700 per capita; real
growth rate, -1 % (est.)
Agriculture: little production
Major industries: petroleum refinin
C
g on
uracao and
Aruba; petroleum transshipment facilities on Curacao,
Aruba, and Bonaire; tourism on Curacao, Aruba, and St.
Martin; light manufacturing on Curacao and Aruba
Electric power: 300,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.7 billion
kWh produced (1977), 7,000 kWh per capita
Exports: $3,661 million (f.o.b., 1976); petroleum products,
phosphate
Imports: $2,519 million (c.i.f., 1976); crude petroleum,
food, manufactures
Major trade partners: exports-64% U.S., 7% EC, 5%
Canada; imports-61% Venezuela, 12% U.S., 6% Nether-
lands (1972)
Budget: (1976) public sector current revenues, $215
million; public sector current expenditures, $212 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1.8 Netherlands Antillean
florins (NAF)=US$1, official
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 950 km
and earth
total; 300 km paved, 650 km gravel
Ports: 3 major (Willemstad, Oranjestad, Caracasbaai,
Bullennbaai); 6 minor
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased in)
Airfields: 7 total, all usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: generally adequate telecom facili-
ties; extensive interisland radio-relay links; 48,000 telephones
(19.9 per 100 popl.); 11 AM, 1 FM and 5 TV stations; 2
submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 58,000; 34,000 fit for
military service; about 2,000 reach military age (20)
annually
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NEWS
CALEDONIA Pacific
Ocean
Branches: administered by Governor, who is also High
Commissioner for France in the Pacific; responsible to
French Ministry for Overseas France and Governing
Council; Assemblee Territoriale
Government leader: Jean-Gabriel Eriau, Governor and
French High Commissioner
Suffrage: universal
Elections: Assembly elections every 5 years, last in
September 1977
Political parties: Rassemblement Pour La Caledonie-
Conservative; Union Caledonienne-eventual independ-
ence; Union Multiraciale and Palika-independence parties
Voting strength (1977 election): Rassemblement Pour La
Caledonie, 12 seats; Union Caledonienne, 9 seats; Palika, 2
seats; 8 other parties divide up remaining 12 seats
Communists: number unknown; Union Caledonienne
leftist; some politically active Communists were
l
n
t
y
g
ro
s
deported during 1950's; small number of North Vietnamese
LAND
22,015 km2; 6% cultivable, 22% pasture land, 15% forests, less Ocrh parptiesitical parties and pressure groups: several
57% waste or other
Member of: EIB (associate)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing, 3
nm)
Coastline: 2,254 km
PEOPLE
Population: 139,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-New Caledonian(s); adjective-New
Caledonian
Ethnic divisions: Melanesian-Polynesian admixture, over
28,000 Europeans of French extraction
Religion: natives 90% Christian
Language: Melanesian-Polynesian dialects
Literacy: unknown
Labor force: size unknown; Javanese and Tonkinese
laborers were imported for plantations and mines in
pre-World War II period; immigrant labor now coming
from Wallis Islands, New Hebrides, and French Polynesia
Organized labor: unorganized
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Territory of New Caledonia and
dependencies
Type: French overseas territory; represented in French
parliament by one deputy and one Senator
Capital: Noumea
Political subdivisions: 4 islands or island group depen-
dencies-Isle of Pines, Loyalty Islands, Huon Islands, Island
of New Caledonia
Legal system: French law
ECONOMY
GNP: $193 million, $1,800 per capita (1971 est.)
Agriculture: large areas devoted to cattle grazing; major
products-coffee and vegetables; 60% self-sufficient in beef;
must import grains and vegetables
Industry: mining of nickel
Electric power: 320,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.7 billion
kWh produced (1977), 12,145 kWh per capita
Exports: $289 million (f.o.b., 1975); 99% nickel
Imports: $348 million (c.i.f., 1975); machinery, transport
equipment, food
Major trade partners: (1972) exports-55% France, 24%
Japan, 11% U.S.; imports-52% France, 13% Australia, 12%
rest of EC
Monetary conversion rate: 86 CFP francs=US$l (1972)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 5,214 km total; 600 km paved, 1,400 km
gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized surface, 618 km
improved earth, 2,596 km earth
Inland waterways: none
Ports: 1 major (Noumea), 21 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 31 total, 31 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 airfield over
2,440 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: 20,600 telephones (14.9 per 100
popl.); 5 AM, no FM, and 7 TV stations; 1 earth satellite
station
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NEW CALEDONIA
NEW CALEDONIA
1aPU~A99
11REA 4 me
Coral Sea
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NEW HEBRIDES/NEW ZEALAND
NEW HEBRIDES
LAND
About 14,763 km2
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 3 nm
Coastline: about 2,528 km
PEOPLE
Population: 101,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (7-74 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-New Hebridean(s); adjective-New
Hebrides
Ethnic divisions: 92% indigenous Melanesian, 3% Euro-
pean, remainder Vietnamese, Chinese, and various Pacific
Islanders
Religion: most at least nominally Christian
Literacy: probably 10%-20%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: New Hebrides Condominium
Type: Anglo-French condominium
Capital: Vila
Political subdivisions: 4 administrative districts
Legal system: 3 sets of courts; one each for French and
British subjects, one for New Hebrides native affairs
Branches: Representative Assembly, 42 members, elected
November 1977, election boycotted by major party
Government leaders: two resident commissioners, one
French, Robert Gauger; one British, John Champion
Political parties and leaders: National Party (Vanuaaku
Pati), chairman Walter Lini; NA Griamel Party, leader
Jimmy Stevens; Mouvement d'Action des Nouvelles Hebri-
des (MANH)
ECONOMY
Agriculture: export crops of copra, cocoa, coffee, some
livestock and fish production; subsistence crops of copra,
taro, yams
Electric power: 4,000 kW capacity (1977); 13 million
kWh produced (1977), 130 kWh per capita
Exports: $27 million (1974); 24% copra, 59% frozen fish
Imports: $44 million (1974)
Monetary conversion rate: 1 pound=US$2.37 (official
currency), 0.74 Australian $=US$1, 86 Colonial Franc
Pacifique (CFP)=US$1 (1972)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: at least 240 km sealed or all-weather roads
Inland waterways: none
Ports: 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 29 total, 26 usable; 2 runways 1,220-2,439 m, 2
with permanent-surface runways
Telecommunications: 3 AM broadcast stations; 2,300
telephones (2.3) per 100 popl.)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: no military forces maintained; however, the
French and British maintain constabularies of about 70 men
each
NEW ZEALAND
LAND
268,276 km2; 3% cultivated, 50% pasture; 10% parks and
reserves; 20% waste, water, etc., 1% urban, 16% forested; 4
principal islands, 2 minor inhabited islands, several minor
uninhabited islands
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing,
200 nm)
Coastline: about 15,134 km
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NEW ZEALAND/NICARAGUA
PEOPLE
Population: 3,116,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.3% (7-76 to 7-77)
Zealand
Ethnic
Religion: 90% Christian, 9%
Hindu, Confucian, and other
Literacy: 98%
Maori
unspecified; 1%
Labor force: 1,207,700; 13% agriculture, 33%
turing and construction, 9% transportation and communica-
tions, 24% commerce and finance, 21% administrative and
professional; unemployment 5.7% (1976)
Organized labor: 52% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Dominion of New Zealand (rarely used)
Type: independent state within Commonwealth, recogniz-
ing Elizabeth II as head of state
Capital: Wellington
Political subdivisions: 112 counties
Legal system: based on English law, with special land
legislation and land courts for Maori tribesmen; constitution
consists of various documents, including certain acts of the
U.K. and New Zealand Parliaments; legal education at
Victoria, Auckland, Canterbury, and Otago Universities;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Waitangi Day, 6 February
Branches: unicameral legislature (General Assembly,
commonly called Parliament); Cabinet responsible to Parlia-
ment; 3-level court system (Magistrates, Courts, Supreme
Court, and Court of Appeal)
Government leader: Prime Minister Robert D. Muldoon
Suffrage: universal age 18 and over
Elections: held at 3 year intervals or sooner if parliament
is dissolved by Prime Minister; last election November 1975
Political parties and leaders: National Party (Govern-
ment), Robert D. Muldoon; Labour Party (Opposition),
Wallace E. Bowling; Social Credit Political League, Bruce
Beetham; Communist Party, George Victor Wilcox; pro-
Soviet Socialist Unity Party, George Edward Jackson
Voting strength (1975 election): National Party 55 seats,
Labour Party 32 seats
Communists: CPNZ about 300, SUP about 100
Member of: ADB, ANZUS, ASPAC, Colombo Plan, DAC,
ESCAP, FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IEA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITU, OECD, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $12.8 billion (1976), $3,870 per capita; real average
annual growth (1975-77), 1.4%
Agriculture: fodder and silage crops about one-half of
area planted in field crops; main products-wool, meat,
dairy products; New Zealand is food surplus country; caloric
intake, 3,500 calories per day per capita (1964)
Fishing: catch 65,525 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: food processing, textile production,
machinery, transport equipment; wood and paper products
Electric power: 5,380,000 kW capacity (1977); 22.1
billion kWh produced (1977), 6,975 kWh per capita
Exports: $3.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal products
(trade year 1977)-24% meat, 14% dairy products, 20% wool
Imports: $3.1 billion (c.i.f., 1977); 29% machinery, 23%
manufactured goods, 11% chemicals (trade year 1977)
Major trade partners: (trade year 1977) exports-20%
U.K., 13% Japan, 12% Australia, 11% U.S.; imports-21%
Australia, 17% U.K., 15% Japan, 13% U.S.
Aid: gross official aid deliveries to LDC and multilateral
agencies FY75, $80.1 million
Budget: expenditures, 3,827 million NZ$, receipts, 3,330
million NZ$ (FY75)
Monetary conversion rate: NZ$1=US$1.0209, January
1978
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
NOTE: trade data are for year ending 30 June; trade year
and fiscal year do not correspond
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,799 km; all 1.067-meter gage; 274 km double
track; 113 km electrified; over 99% government owned
Highways: 92,374 km total (1974); 44,940 km paved,
47,434 km gravel or crushed stone
Inland waterways: 1,609 km; of little
transportation
Pipelines: natural gas, 785 km
Ports: 3 major
Civil air: about 50 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 193 total, 184 usable; 23 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 50 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 5 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: excellent international and domes-
tic systems; 1,570,000 telephones (52 per 100 popl.); 60 AM
stations in 31 cities, no FM, 11 TV stations, and 129
repeaters; submarine cables extend to Australia and Fiji
Islands; 1 ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 744,000; 629,000 fit for
military service; average number reaching military age (20)
annually about 29,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
March 1978, $230.1 million; about 3.7% of central govern-
ment budget
NICARAGUA
LAND
147,900 km2; 7% arable, 7% prairie and pasture, 50%
forest, 36% urban, waste, or other
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NICARAGUA
Managua J
Land boundaries: 1,220 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing, 200
nm; continental shelf, including sovereignty over superjacent
waters)
Coastline: 910 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,409,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.1 % (current)
Nationality: noun-Nicaraguan(s); adjective-Nicara-
guan
Ethnic divisions: 69% mestizo, 17% white, 9% Negro, 5%
Indian
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish (official); English speaking minority
on Atlantic coast
Literacy: 52% of population 10 years of age and over
Labor force: 713,000 (1976 est.); 50% agriculture, 12%
manufacturing, 14% services, 24% other; shortage of skilled
labor, but underemployment of unskilled labor except
during harvest
Organized labor: about 5.6% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Nicaragua
Type: republic
Capital: Managua
Political subdivisions: 1 national district and 16
departments
Legal system: based on Spanish civil law system;
constitution adopted in 1974; legal education at Universidad
Nacional de Nicaragua and Universidad Centroamericana;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 15 September
Branches: President (traditionally dominant), bicameral
legislature, judiciary elected by legislature, and Supreme
Electoral Tribunal (4th branch)
Government leader: President Anastasio Somoza
Suffrage: universal over age 18 if married or literate,
otherwise 21
Elections: every 6 years; municipal elections every 3 years
Political parties and leaders: Nationalist Liberal Party
(PLN), Anastasio Somoza; Nicaraguan Conservative Party
(PCN), Rene Sandino
Voting strength (1974 elections): PLN, 95% of votes;
PCN, 5% of votes; PCN will, however, occupy 40% of
legislative seats by constitutional provision
Communists: Communist movement split into hard-line
Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN) illegal, 60 members;
soft-line Nicaraguan Communist Party (PCN) illegal, 40
members, and small anti-Somoza terrorist organization
Sandinist National Liberation Front (FSLN) activist, 50-150
members; about 1,000 sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: Democratic Union of
Liberation (UDEL), an opposition front lacking legal status
of a political party, composed of anti-Somoza political
movements and labor groups with orientations ranging from
conservative to Christian Democrat to Communist, leader-
ship includes Ramiro Sacasa, Ignacio Zelaya, Domingo
Sanchez; Nicaraguan Development Institute (INDE), a
private sector pressure group with two operative arms:
FUNDE and EDUCREDITO which, respectively, promote
cooperatives and disburse educational loans
Member of: CACM, FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IBRD,
ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMF, INTELSAT, IPU,
ISO, ITU, NAMUCAR (Caribbean Multinational Shipping
Line-Naviera nacional del Caribe), OAS, ODECA, SELA,
U.N., UNESCO, UPEB, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $2,228 million (1977 est.); 72% private consump-
tion, 9% government consumption, 21% domestic invest-
ment, -2% net foreign balance (1976); real growth rate
1977, 5.5% est.
Agriculture: main crops-cotton, coffee, sugarcane, rice,
corn, beans, cattle; caloric intake, 2,300 calories per day per
capita (1966)
Fishing: catch 18,400 metric tons (1975); exports valued
at $19.4 million (1976)
Major industries: food processing, chemicals, metal
products, textiles and clothing
Electric power: 365,000 kW capacity (1977); 1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 425 kWh per capita
Exports: $630 million (f.o.b., 1977); cotton, coffee,
chemical products, meat, sugar
Imports: $754 million (c.i.f., 1977); food and non-food
agricultural products, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, trans-
portation equipment, machinery, construction materials,
clothing, petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-30% U.S., 23% CACM,
47% other; imports-31% U.S., 26% CACM, 43% other
(1976)
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Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $178
million loans, $89 million grants; international organizations
(FY46-73), $266 million; military-from U.S. (FY46-76),
$29 million
Budget: 1978 expenditures $480 million, revenues $300
million
Monetary conversion rate: 7 cordobas=US$1 (official)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 318 km 1.067-meter gage, government owned
Highways: 16,900 km total; 1,500 km paved, 6,200 km
otherwise improved, 9,200 km unimproved
Inland waterways: 2,220 km, including 2 large lakes
Pipelines: crude oil, 56 km
Ports: 4 major (Corinto, Puerto Cabezas, Puerto Somoza,
San Juan del Sur), 6 minor
Civil air: 12 major transport aircraft (including 2 leased
in)
Airfields: 428 total, 401 usable; 7 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 7 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: low-capacity wire and radio-relay
network; connection into Central American microwave net;
satellite ground station; 55,300 telephones (2.5 per 100
popl.); 85 AM, 30 FM, and 7 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 561,000; 343,000 fit for
military service; 25,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $56.2 million for the Ministry of Defense, including
civil functions (e.g., police and civil air); 13% of central
government budget
NIGER
LAND
1,266,510 km2; about 3% cultivated, perhaps 20% some-
what arable, remainder desert
Land boundaries: 5,745 km
PEOPLE
Population: 4,995,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.8% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Nigerien (sing. and pl.); adjective-
Niger
Ethnic divisions: main Negroid groups 75% (of which,
Hausa 50%, Djerma and Songhai 21%); Caucasian elements
include Tuareg, Toubous, and Tamacheks; mixed group
includes Fulani
Religion: 80% Muslim, remainder largely animists and a
very few Christians
Language: French official, many African languages;
Hausa used for trade
Literacy: about 6%
Labor force: 26,000 wage earners; bulk of population
engaged in subsistence agriculture and animal husbandry
Organized labor: negligible
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Niger
Type: republic; military regime in power since April 1974
Capital: Niamey
Political subdivisions: 7 departments, 32 arrondissements
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1960, suspended 1974;
judicial review of legislative acts in Constitutional Chamber
of the Supreme Court; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Proclamation of the Republic, 18
December
Branches: executive authority exercised by Supreme
Military Council (SMC) composed of army officers; cabinet
includes civilians
Government leader: Lt. Col. Seyni Kountche, President
of Supreme Military Council and Chief of State
Suffrage: suspended
Elections: political activity banned
Political parties and leaders: political parties banned
Communists: no Communist party; some sympathizers in
outlawed Sawaba party
Member of: AFDB, APC, CEAO, EAMA, ECA,
ECOWAS, Entente, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, Lake Chad Basin
Commission, Niger River Commission, NAM, OAU, OCAM,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
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ECONOMY
GDP: $454 million (1975 est.), $100 per capita, annual
growth estimated by U.S. Embassy at 9.8% (1973-76)
Agriculture: commercial-peanuts, cotton, livestock;
main food crops-millet, sorghum, niche beans, vegetables
Major industries: cement plant, brick factory, rice mill,
small cotton gins, oil presses, slaughterhouse, and a few other
small light industries; uranium production began in 1971
Electric power: 20,000 kW capacity (1977); 70 million
kWh produced (1977), 15 kWh per capita
Exports: $134 million (f.o.b., 1976); about 65% uranium,
rest peanuts and related products, livestock, hides, skins;
exports understated because much regional trade not
recorded
Imports: $176 million (c.i.f., 1976); fuels, machinery,
transport equipment, foodstuffs, consumer goods
Major trade partners: France (over 50%), other EC
countries, Nigeria, UDEAC countries, U.S.; preferential
tariff to EC and franc zone countries
Aid: economic-France (1960 to mid-1967), $68 million;
EC (FY61-73), $100 million; U.S. (FY61-76), $73 million;
West Germany, Israel, Republic of China, and U.N. have
also extended aid; military-of $2.8 million (1954-68)
Budget: projected to balance at about $173 million (1978)
Monetary conversion rate: about 242.69 Communaute
Financiere Africaine=US$1 as of November 1977, floating
Fiscal year: 1 October-30 September
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 7,122 km total; 1,889 km bituminous, 2,579
km gravel, 2,654 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: Niger River navigable 300 kin from
Niamey to Gaya on the Benin frontier from mid- December
through March
Ports: Niger landlocked; outlet to sea is Cotonou, Benin
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 66 total, 62 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 18 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: sparse system of open-wire lines,
radio-relay links, and small radiocommunications stations;
principal telecommunication center Niamey; 8,000 tele-
phones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 10 AM stations, no FM, and I TV
station; I Atlantic Ocean Comsat station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,114,000; 595,000 fit
for military service; about 47,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 September
1977, $6.9 million; about 5% of central government budget
NIGERIA
LAND
924,630 km'; 24% arable (13% of total land area under
cultivation), 35% forested, 41% desert, waste, urban, or other
Land boundaries: 4,034 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 30 nm
Coastline: 853 km
PEOPLE
Population: 68,486,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Nigerian(s); adjective-Nigerian
Ethnic divisions: of the more than 250 tribal groups, the
Hausa and Fulani of the north, the Yoruba of the south, and
the Ibos of the east comprise 60% of the population; about
27,000 non-Africans
Religion: 47% Muslim, 34% Christian, 19% other
Literacy: est. 25%
Language: English official; Hausa, Yoruba, and Ibo also
widely used
Labor force: approx. 22.5 million; about 41% of total
population; roughly 1.3 million wage earners, of whom
560,000 work in modern enterprises
Organized labor: between 800,000 and 1 million wage
earners, approx. 2.4% of total labor force, belong to some 70
unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Federal Republic of Nigeria
Type: federal republic since 1963; under military rule
since January 1966
Capital: Lagos
Political subdivisions: 19 states, headed by military
governors
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Legal system: based on English common law, tribal law,
and Islamic law; proposed new constitution to be reviewed
and adopted by October 1979 by a constituent assembly;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 October
Branches: Federal Military Government; decrees issued
by Supreme Military Council, advised by largely civilian
Federal Executive Council
Government leader: Lieutenant General Olusegun Oba-
sanjo, Head of Federal Military Government and Com-
mander in Chief of Nigerian Armed Forces
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage
Elections: nonpartisan elections for local government
councils held in late 1976; the military has promised to
restore power to an elected civilian regime when state and
federal legislative elections are held between October 1978
and October 1979
Political parties and leaders: political parties and
politically active tribal societies were dissolved by decree on
24 May 1966; behind-the-scenes politicking is quickening in
anticipation of scheduled lifting of ban on political activity
in October 1978
Communists: the banned Socialist Workers and Farmers
Party and the Nigerian Trade Union Congress have a limited
political following, no influence on government
Member of: AFDB, APC, Commonwealth, ECA,
ECOWAS, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council, Lake Chad Basin Commission, Niger River
Commission, NAM, OAU, OPEC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $32 billion (est. 1977 current prices), $490 per
capita; 7.5% growth rate (1970-76)
Agriculture: main crops-peanuts, cotton, cocoa, rubber,
yams, cassava, sorghum, palm kernels, millet, corn, rice;
livestock; almost self-sufficient
Fishing: catch 506,825 metric tons (1975); imports $14.5
million (1974)
Major industries: mining-crude oil, natural gas, coal,
tin, columbite; processing industries-oil palm, peanut,
cotton, rubber, petroleum, wood, hides, skins; manufacturing
industries-textiles, cement, building materials, food pro-
ducts, footwear, chemical, printing, ceramics
Electric power: 1,367,000 kW capacity (1977); 4 billion
kWh produced (1977), 60 kWh per capita
Exports: $11.4 billion (f.o.b., 1977); oil (95%), cocoa, palm
products, rubber, timber, tin
Imports: $8.9 billion (c.i.f., 1977); machinery and
transport equipment, manufactured goods, chemicals
Major trade partners: U.K., EC, U.S.
Budget: FY77-78 proposed-current revenue $12.2 bil-
lion, current expenditures, $5.0 billion; capital expenditures,
$8.8 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Naira=US$1.53 (official)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,508 km 1.067-meter gage
Highways: 89,318 km total 15,300 km paved (mostly
bituminous surface treatment); remainder laterite, gravel,
crushed stone, improved earth
Inland waterways: 8,575 km consisting of Niger and
Benue rivers and smaller rivers and creeks; additionally,
Kainji Lake has several hundred miles of navigable lake
routes
Pipelines: 1,207 km crude oil; 97 km natural gas; 5 km
refined products
Ports: 2 major (Lagos/Apapa, Port Harcourt), 10 minor
Civil air: 29 major transport aircraft (including 3 leased
in)
Airfields: 83 total, 76 usable; 16 with permanent-surface
runways; 6 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 23 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: composed of radio-relay links,
open-wire lines, and radiocommunication stations; principal
center Lagos, secondary centers Ibadan and Kaduna;
121,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 pop].); 25 AM, 6 FM, and 9
TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean and 1 Indian Ocean satellite
station and 19 domestic stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 16,425,000; 9,527,000
fit for military service; average number reaching military
age (18) annually 706,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1978,
$2.6 billion; about 17% of central government budget
NORWAY
LAND
Norway: 323,750 km2; Svalbard, 62,160 km2; Jan Mayen,
373 km2; 3% arable, 2% meadows and pastures, 21%
forested, 74% other
Land boundaries: 2,579 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 4 nm (fishing 200
nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: mainland 3,419 km; islands 2,413 km (excludes
long fjords and numerous small islands and minor indenta-
tions which total as much as 16,093 km overall)
PEOPLE
Population: 4,061,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.4% (7-76 to 7-77)
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Nationality: noun-Norwegian(s); adjective-Norwegian
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous white population, small
Lappish minority
Religion: 96% Evangelical Lutheran, 4% other Protestant
and Roman Catholic, 1% other
Language: Norwegian, small Lapp and Finnish-speaking
minorities
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 1.9 million; 11.4% agriculture, forestry,
fishing, 25.3% mining and manufacturing, 8.1% construc-
tion, 16.3% commerce, 9.9% transportion and communica-
tion, 28.5% services; 1.4% unemployed (average annual
1977)
Organized labor: 60% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Norway
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Oslo
Political subdivisions: 19 counties,
towns
Legal system: mixture of customary law, civil law system,
and common law traditions; constitution adopted 1814,
modified 1884; Supreme Court renders advisory opinions to
legislature when asked; legal education at University of Oslo;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Constitution Day, 17 May
Branches: legislative authority rests jointly with Crown
and parliament (Storting); executive power vested in Crown
but exercised by cabinet responsible to parliament; Supreme
Court, 5 superior courts, 104 lower courts
Government leaders: King Olav V; Prime Minister Odvar
Nordli
Suffrage:
universal, but not compulsory, over age 20
Elections: held every 4 years (next in September 1981)
Political parties and leaders: Labor, Reiulf Steen;
Conservative, Erling Norvik; Center, Gunnar Stalsett;
Christian People's, Lars Kosvald; Liberal, Hans Hammond
Rossbach; New People's Party, Magne Lerheim; Socialist
Left, Berge Furre; Norwegian Communist, Martin Gunnar
Knutsen; Progressive, Arve Loennum
Voting strength (1977 election): Labor, 42.5%; Conserva-
tive, 24.6%; Christian People's, 12.1%; Center, 8.6%; New
People's Party (anti-tax), 1.7%; Socialist Left (Socialist
Electoral Alliance) (formerly anti-tax), 4.1%; liberal, 3.2%
Progressive, 1.9%; Norwegian Communist, 0.4%; Red Elec-
tion Alliance, 0.6%, latter two are communist parties
Communists: 2,500 est.; a number of sympathizers as
indicated by the 22,500 Communist votes cast in the 1969
election (in the 1973 election the Communist Party vote total
was submerged in the 241,851 votes won by the Socialist
Electorial Alliance which included the Norwegian Commu-
nist Party and two other parties)
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC , EC (Free
Trade Agreement), EFTA, ESRO (observer), FAO, GATT,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA (associate
member), IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc
Study Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITU, IWC-International
Whaling Commission, IWC-International Wheat Council,
NATO, Nordic Council, OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $35.8 billion in 1977, $8,831 per capita; 56% private
consumption; 36% investment; 19% government; net foreign
balance -11%; 1976 growth rate 3.9%, in constant prices;
4.8% average (1970-76)
Agriculture: animal husbandry
crops-feed grains, potatoes, fruits, vegetables; 40% self-suf-
ficient; food shortages-food grains, sugar; caloric intake,
2,940 calories per day per capita (1969-70)
Fishing: catch 3.1 million metric tons (1976); value $476
million (1976); exports $467 million (1976)
Major industries: food processing, shipbuilding,
pulp, paper products, metals, chemicals
Shortages: most raw materials with the exception of
timber, petroleum, iron, copper, and ilmenite ore, dairy
products and fish
Crude steel: 732,779 metric tons produced (1977), 181 kg
per capita
Electric power: 18,200,000 kW capacity (1977); 75 billion
kWh produced (1977), 18,500 kWh per capita
Exports:. $8,712 million (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
metals, pulp and paper, fish products, ships, chemicals, oil
Imports: $12,874 million (c.i.f., 1977); principal items-
foodstuff, ships, fuels, motor vehicles, iron and steel,
chemical compounds, textiles
Major trade partners: 49% EC (19% U.K., 12% West
Germany, 6% Denmark); 16% Sweden; 5% U.S.; 3% East
Bloc countries (1977)
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Aid: donor: bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $503 million (1970-76)
Budget: (1977) revenues $8.8 billion, expenditures $9.3
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 kroner=US$0.188 (1977)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 4,257 km standard gage (1.435 m); Norwegian
State Railways (NSB) operates 4,241 km (2,440 km
electrified and 91 km double track); 16 km privately-owned
and electrified
Highways: 77,100 km total; 16,683 km concrete and
bitumen; 17,877 km bituminous treated; 42,540 km gravel,
crushed stone, and earth
Inland waterways: 1,577 km; 1.5-2.4 m draft vessels
maximum
Pipelines: refined products, 53 km
Ports: 9 major, 69 minor
Civil air: 51 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
out)
Airfields: 106 total, 105 usable; 53 with permanent-
surface runways; 12 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 18 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 20 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: high-quality domestic and interna-
tional telephone, telegraph, and telex service; 1.48 million
telephones (36.6 per 100 pop].); 40 AM, 357 FM, and 740 TV
stations; 5 coaxial submarine cables; 2 domestic satellite
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 925,000; 751,000 fit for
military service; average number reaching military age (20)
annually, 31,000
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $1,300.5 million; about 9.5% of central
government budget
OMAN
LAND
About 212,380 km'; negligible amount forested, remain-
der desert, waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 1,384 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 50
nm)
Coastline: 2,092 km
PEOPLE
Population: 550,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Omani(s); adjective-Omani
Ethnic divisions: almost entirely Arab with small groups
of Iranians, Baluchis, and Indians
Religion: Muslim
Language: Arabic
Literacy: very low
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Sultanate of Oman
Type: absolute monarchy; independent, with strong
residual U.K. influence
Capital: Muscat
Legal system: based on English common law and Islamic
law; no constitution; ultimate appeal to the sultan; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 18 November
Government leader: Sultan Qabus ibn Said Al Bu Said
Other political or pressure groups: Popular Front for the
Liberation of Oman (PFLO), based in South Yemen
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, IMF, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $1.4 billion (1976 est.), $2,710 per capita est.
Agriculture: based on subsistence farming (fruits, dates,
cereals, cattle, camels), fishing, and trade
Major industries: petroleum discovery in 1964; produc-
tion began in 1967; production 1977, 340,000 b/d; pipeline
capacity, 400,000 b/d; revenue for 1976 est. at $1.4 billion
Electric power: 200,000 kW capacity (1977); 300 million
kWh produced (1977), 555 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.6 billion (f.o.b., 1976) mostly petroleum;
non-oil exports (mostly agricultural)
Imports: $0.7 billion (c.i.f., 1976)
Major trade partners: U.K., U.S., other European, Gulf
states, India, Australia, China, Japan
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Aid: bilateral assistance pledged, $134 million in 1974,
IBRD $8 million; aid commitment by Oman, $39 million to
multilateral institutions
Budget: (1977) revenues $2.082 billion, expenditures
$2.248 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Riyal Omani=US$2.92 (as
of May 1976)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 2,816 km total; 5 km bituminous surface,
2,811 km motorable track
Pipelines: crude oil 370 km
Ports: 1 major (Qaboos), 3 minor
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased in)
Airfields: 163 total, 131 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; I runway over 3,660 in, 5 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 47 with runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: limited facilities of open-wire,
radio-relay and radiocommunications stations; 2 satellite
ground stations; 7,300 telephones (1.3 per 100 popl.); 3 AM,
no FM, 2 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 118,000; 68,000 fit for
military service
PAKISTAN
LAND
803,000 km' (includes Pakistani part of Jammu-Kashmir);
40% arable, including 24% cultivated; 23% unsuitable for
cultivation; 34% unreported, probably mostly waste; 3%
forested
Land boundaries: 5,900 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm; plus right to establish 100 nm conservation zones
beyond territorial sea); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 1,046 km
PEOPLE
Population: 77,786,000, excluding Junagadh, Manavadar,
Gilgit, Baltistan, and the disputed area of Jammu-Kashmir,
(July 1978), average annual growth rate 3.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Pakistani(s); adjective-Pakistani
Religion: 97% Muslim, 3% other
Language: official, Urdu; total spoken languages-7%
Urdu, 64% Punjabi, 12% Sindhi, 8% Pushtu, 9% other;
English is lingua franca
Literacy: about 17%
Labor force: 20 million (est. 1974); 60% agriculture, 16%
industry, 7% commerce, 15% service, 2% unemployed
Organized labor: 5% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Type: parliamentary, federal republic; military seized
power 5 July 1977 and temporarily suspended some
constitutional provisions
Capital: Islamabad
Political subdivisions: 4 provinces-Punjab, Sind, Balu-
chistan, and North-West Frontier-with the capital territory
of Islamabad and certain tribal areas centrally administered;
Pakistan claims that Azad Kashmir is independent pending a
settlement of the dispute with India, but it is in fact under
Pakistani control
Legal system: based on English common law; accepts
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Pakistan Day, 23 March
Government leaders: President Fazal Elahi Chaudhry;
Chief Martial Law Administrator Mohammed Zia-ul-Haq
Suffrage: universal from age 18
Elections: opposition agitation against rigging of elections
in March 1977 eventually led to military coup; military
promised to hold new national and provincial assembly
elections in October 1977 but later postponed them
indefinitely
Political parties and leaders: Pakistan People's Party
(PPP), pro-Bhutto wing, Mrs. Z. A. Bhutto, moderate wing,
Maulana Kauser Niazi; Pakistan Muslim League (QML),
Abdul Qaiyum Khan; Tehrik-i-Istiglal, Asghar Khan; Paki-
stan National Alliance (PNA), a coalition of eight parties
including Pakistan Muslim League (PML)-Pir of Pagaro
group; National Democratic Party (NDP), Sherbaz Mazari
(formed in 1975 by members of outlawed National Awami
Party (NAP) of Abdul Wali Khan, who is de facto NDP
leader); Jamaat-i-Islami (JI), Tofail Mohammed; Jamiat-
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ul-Ulema-i-Pakistan (JUP), Maulana Shah Ahmed Noorani; good; 300,000 (est.) telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); 27 AM,
Jamiat-ul-Ulema-i-Islam (JUI), Mufti Mahmud; Pakistan no FM, 16 TV stations, and 4 repeaters; 1 ground satellite
Nasrullah Khan station
Democratic Party (PDP),
Communists: party membership very small; sympathizers
estimated at several thousand
Other political or pressure groups: military remains
potentially strong political force
Member of: ADB, LENTO, Colombo Plan, FAO, GATT,
G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, 1110, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
RCD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $15.2 billion (FY77 est.), $200 per capita; average
annual real growth, 3.8% (1970-77)
Agriculture: extensive irrigation; main crops-wheat, rice,
and cotton; foodgrain shortage, about 1 million tons
imported in FY77
Fishing: catch 211,000 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: cotton textiles, food processing, tobacco,
engineering, chemicals, natural gas
Electric power: 3,430,000 kW capacity (1977); 13.3
billion kWh produced (1977), 175 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,174 million (f.o.b., 1977); cotton (raw and
manufactured), rice
Imports: $2,455 million (c.i.f., 1977); foodgrains, edible
oil, crude oil,machinery, transport equipment, chemicals
Major trade partners: U.S., U.K., Japan, West Germany
Budget: expenditures, FY77-current expenditures,
$2,042 million; capital expenditures, $1,407 million
Monetary conversion rate: 9.9 rupees=US$l (since
February 1973)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
MUNICATIONS
COM
Railroads: 7,489 km total; 446 km meter gage (1.00 m),
6,431 km broad gage (1.676 m), 612 km narrow gage
(0.762 m); 1,022 km double track; 286 km electrified;
overnment-owned
DEFENSE
Military manpower: males 15-49, 17,693,000; 10,485,000
fit for military service; 838,000 reach military age (17)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978, $996
million; about 28.4% of central government budget
PANAMA
LAND
75,650 km' (excluding Canal Zone, 1,430 km'); 24%
agricultural land (9% fallow, 4% cropland, 11% pasture),
20% exploitable forest, 56% other forests, urban, and waste
Land boundaries: 630 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm (continen-
tal shelf including sovereignty over superiacent waters)
Coastline: 2,490 km
g
Highways: 63,567 km total; 16,077 km paved, 12,862 km
gravel, 1,843 km improved earth, 32,785 km unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 1,850 km
Pipelines: 230 km crude oil; 1,931 km natural gas
Ports: 1 major, 5 minor
Civil air: 27 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 108 total, 102 usable; 64 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 25 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 48 with runways 1,200-2,439 m
Telecommunications: good international radiocommuni-
cation service over CENTO microwave and intelsat satellite;
domestic radiocommunications poor; broadcast service very
PEOPLE
Population: 1,812,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Panamanian(s); adjective-Pana-
manian
Ethnic divisions: 70% mestizo, 14% Negro, 9% white, 7%
Indian and other
Religion: over 90% Roman Catholic, remainder mainly
Protestant
Language: Spanish; about 14% speak English as native
tongue; many Panamanians bilingual
Literacy: 82% of population 10 years of age and over
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Labor force: 482,200 (1972 est.); 39.5% commerce,
finance and services; 33.9% agriculture, hunting and fishing;
9.7% manufacturing and mining; 6.8% construction; 5%
Canal Zone; 3.9% transportation and communications; 1.2%
utilities; unemployment estimated at 10% to 13%; shortage
of skilled labor but an oversupply of unskilled labor
Organized labor: 8.4% of labor force (1972 est.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Panama
Type: republic
Capital: Panama
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces, I intendancy
Legal system: based on civil law system; constitution
adopted in 1972; .judicial review of legislative acts in the
Supreme Court; legal education at University of Panama;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 3 November
Branches: President (figurehead, subordinate to National
Guard Commandant, General Omar Torrijos, who was
granted special powers for 6 years by the Constitutional
Assembly in 1972); popularly elected unicameral legislature
(Corregimiento), which elects the President but which
exercises few, if any, legislative powers and meets for one
month each year; during the remainder of the
year the
National Legislative Council, the President, Vice President,
Cabinet, and selected members of the Corregimiento
exercise legislative functions; presidentially appointed Su-
preme Court
Government leaders: Demetrio Lakas is Constitutional
President and Chief of State, but subordinate to Gen. Omar
Torrijos, the National Guard Commandant and Chief of
Government
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: elections for assembly of corregimientos in
August 1978; corregimiento to choose President
Political parties and leaders: political parties suspended;
although the government in April 1978 indicated it would
establish a new basis for parties, the new law will probably
not be promulgated until very late 1978 or 1979; Communist
Party illegal but allowed to operate
Voting strength: no parties were active in the 1972
elections
Communists: 500 active and several hundred inactive
members People's Party (PdP); 500-600 members of rival
Fraccion movement which split from PdP in 1974; 2,500
sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: National Council of
Private Enterprise (CONEP); Panamanian Association of
Business Executives (APEDE)
Member of: FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA,
IDB, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, IWC-International
Whaling Commission, IWC-International Wheat Council,
NAM, OAS, SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPEB, UPU, WHO,
WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $2,006 million (1976), $1,167 per capita; 66%
private consumption, 15% government consumption, 29%
gross Fixed investment, -10% net foreign balance (1976);
real growth (1976), 0.0%
Agriculture: main crops-bananas, rice, corn, coffee,
sugarcane; self-sufficient in most basic foods; 2,450 calories
per day per capita (1969 )
Fishing: catch 80,183 metric tons (1975); exports $18.8
Million (1974); imports $2.2 million (1974)
Major industries: food processing, metal products, con-
struction materials, petroleum products, clothing, furniture
Electric power (including Canal Zone): 600,000 kW
capacity (1977); 2.5 billion kWh produced (1977), 1,359
kWh per capita
Exports: $250 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); bananas, petro-
leum products shrimp sugar, meat, coffee
Imports: $700 million (c.i.f., 1977 est.); manufactures,
transportation equipment, crude petroleum, chemicals,
foodstuffs
Major trade partners: exports-45% U.S., 12% Canal
Zone, 9% West Germany, 7% Italy, 6% Netherlands;
imports-31% U.S., 18% Ecuador, 8% Venezuela, 8% Colon
Free Zone, 5% Japan, 4% Saudi Arabia, 3% Trinidad and
Tobago (1976)
Aid: economic-from U.S. (FY46-76), $324 million loans,
$177 million grants; from international organizations
(FY46-75), $266 million; from other Western countries
(1960-71), $28.9 million; military-assistance from U.S.
(FY46-75), $10 million
Budget: (1978) $538 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Balboa=US$1 (official)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 249 km total; 77 km 1.524-meter gage, 172 km
0
914
.
-meter gage
Highways. 7 800 i_
KH1
gravel or crushed stone, 3,000 kin improved ands unim-
proved earth; Panama Canal Zone 240 km; 230 km paved.
10 km gravel
Inland waterways: 800 km navigable by shallow draft
l
vesse
s; 82 km Panama Canal
Pipelines: refined products, 96 km
Ports: 2 major (Cristobal/Colon/Coco Solo,
Panama City), 10 minor
Civil air: 19 major transport aircraft
Airfields: (including Canal Zone) 151 total, 151 usable; 34
with permanent-surface runways; 2 with runways
2,440-3,659 m; 16 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane
stations
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Telecommunications: domestic and international telecom
facilities well developed; connection into Central American
microwave net; COMSAT ground station; 155,200 tele-
phones (9.0 per 100 popl.); 90 AM, 30 FM, and 13 TV
stations; 1 coaxial submarine cable
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 389,000; 270,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $32.6 million; about 10% of central government
budget
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
SOLOMON
~,ISLANUS
LAND
475,369 kmz
Land boundaries: 966 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: about 5,152 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,985,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (7-73 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Papua New Guinean(s); adjective-
Papua New Guinean
Ethnic divisions: predominantly Melanesian and Papuan,
some Negrito, Micronesian, and Polynesian types
Religion: over one-half of population nominally Christian
(490,000 Catholic, 320,000 Lutheran, other Protestant sects);
remainder animist
Language: 700 indigenous languages; pidgin English and
2 or 3 native languages are linguae francae for over one-half
of population; English spoken by 1% to 2% of population
Literacy: 15%; in English, 0.1%
Labor force: no available figures; mostly subsistence
farmers
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Papua New Guinea
Type: independent state within Commonwealth recogniz-
ing Elizabeth II as head of state
Capital: Port Moresby
Political subdivisions: 18 administrative districts (12 in
New Guinea, 6 in Papua)
Legal system: based on English common law
National holiday: Independence Day, 16 September
Branches: executive-Executive Council; legislature-
House of Assembly (109 members); judiciary-court system
consists of Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea and various
inferior courts (District Courts, Local Courts, Children's
Courts, Wardens' Courts)
Government leaders: Governor General, Tore Lokoloko;
Prime Minister, Michael Somare
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage
Elections: preferential-type elections for 109-member
House of Assembly every 4 years, last held in June 1977
Political parties: Pangu Party, People's Progress Party,
United Party, Papua Besena
Communists: no significant strength
Member of: ADB, CIPEC (associate), Commonwealth,
ESCAP (associate), G-77, IBRD, ILO, IMF, U.N., WHO
(associate)
ECONOMY
GNP: $1.2 billion (FY76 est.); real average annual growth
rate (1969-74) 7% est.
Agriculture: main crops-coconuts, coffee, cocoa, tea
Major industries: sawmilling and timber processing,
copper mining (Bougainville)
Electric power: 284,000 kW capacity (1977); 700 million
kWh produced (1977), 240 kWh per capita
Exports: $636 million (f.o.b., FY77); principal products-
copper, coconut products, coffee beans, timber
Imports: $484 million (f.o.b., FY77)
Major trade partners: Australia, U.K., Japan
Aid: economic-Australia, $1,158 million committed
(1976-81); World Bank group (1968-September 1969), $7.5
million committed; U.S. (FY70-74), $32.5 million extended
Budget: (75-76) receipts 400 Australian dollars, expendi-
tures 408 Australian dollars
Monetary conversion rate: Kina $1=US$1.30
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 19,200 km total; 640 km paved, 10,960 km
gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized soil surface, 7,600 km
unimproved earth
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA/PARAGUAY
Inland waterways: 10,940 km
Ports: 5 principal, 8 minor
Civil air: about 19 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 540 total, 481 usable; 19 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 2 with runways 2,440-with 3,659 m; 43 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 with runway 2,750 m-Port
Moresby
Telecommunications: Papua New Guinea telecom serv-
ices are adequate and are being improved; principal telecom
centers include Goroka, Lae, Madang, Mount Hagen, and
Wewak in New Guinea; and Daru, Port Moresby and
Samarai in Papua; facilities provide radiobroadcast, radio-
telephone and telegraph, coastal radio, aeronautical radio
and international radiocommunication services; numerous
privately owned radio facilities exist; submarine cables
extend from Madang to Australia and Guam; 37,500
telephones (1.3 per 100 popl.); 31 AM, no FM and no TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 687,000; about 378,000
fit for military service
Supply: dependent on Australia
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1976,
$22.3 million; 4.3% of central government budget
PARAGUAY
LAND
406,630 km2; 2% under crops, 24% meadow and pasture,
52% forested, 22% urban, waste, and other
Land boundaries: 3,444 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,095,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Paraguayan(s); adjective-Para-
guayan
Ethnic divisions: 95% mestizo, 5% white and Indian
Religion: 97% Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish and Guarani
Literacy: officially estimated at 74% above age 10, but
probably much lower (40%)
Labor force: 800,000 (1971 .est.); 52.6% agriculture,
forestry, fishing; 28.2% services; 19.2% manufacturing and
mining (1970)
Organized labor: about 5% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Paraguay
Type: republic; under authoritarian rule
Capital: Asuncion
Political subdivisions: 16 departments and the national
capital, 154 municipalities
Legal system: based on Argentine codes, Roman law, and
French codes; constitution promulgated 1967; judicial
review of legislative acts in Supreme Court; legal education
at National University of Asuncion and Catholic University
of Our Lady of the Assumption; does not accept compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 14 May
Branches: President heads executive; bicameral legisla-
ture; judiciary headed by Supreme Court
Government leader: President General Alfredo Stroessner
Suffrage: universal; compulsory between ages of 18-60
Elections: President and Congress elected together every
5 years; last election held in February 1978
Political parties and leaders: Colorado Party, Juan
Ramon Chavez; Liberal Party (Levi-Liberal Party), Carlos
Levi Ruffinelli; Febrerista Party, Roque Gaona; Radical
Liberal Party and United Liberal Party (provisional
unification of Liberal and Radical Liberal parties), Miguel
Angel Martinez Yaryes; Christian Democratic Party, Anibal
Recalde Sosa
Voting strength (February 1978 general election): 90%
Colorado Party, 5% Radical Liberal Party, 3% Liberal Party,
Febrerista Party boycotted elections
Communists: Oscar Creydt faction and Miguel Angel
Soler faction (both illegal); est. 3,000 to 4,000 party members
and sympathizers in Paraguay, very few are hard core; party
in exile is small and deeply divided
Other political or pressure groups: Popular Colorado
Movement (MoPoCo) led by Epifanio Mendez Fleitas, in
exile
Member of: FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA,
IDB, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, LAFTA, OAS, SELA, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
1.60
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ECONOMY
GDP: $2.0 billion (1977, at current prices), $708 per
capita; 7.0% public consumption; 73.6% private consump-
tion, 29.4% gross domestic investment, -10.0% net foreign
balance (1976); real growth rate 1977, 8.24%
Agriculture: main crops-oilseeds, cotton, wheat, manioc,
sweet potatoes, tobacco, corn, rice, sugarcane; self-sufficient
in most foods; caloric intake, 2,580 calories per day per
capita (1963-64); protein intake, 70 grams per day per capita
(20 grams of animal origin)
Major industries: meat packing, oilseed crushing, milling,
brewing, textiles, light consumer goods, cement
Electric power: 230,000 kW capacity (1977); 550 million
kWh produced (1977), 193 kWh per capita
Exports: $181.3 million (f.o.b., 1976); cotton, oilseeds,
meat products, tobacco, timber, coffee, essential oils, tung oil
Imports: $236.3 million (f.o.b., 1976); fuels and lubricants,
machinery and motors, motor vehicles, beverages and
tobacco, foodstuffs
Major trade partners: 21% Argentina, 17% Brazil, 13%
Algeria, 10% U.S.
Aid: economic assistance-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76
and transition quarter), $84 million loans, $78 million grants;
from international organizations (FY46-75), $288.7 million;
from other Western countries (1960-70), $21.9 million;
military-assistance from U.S. (FY57-76), $30 million
Monetary conversion rate: 126 guaranies=US$1 (official
rate, April 1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,043 km total; 437 km standard gage (1.435
m), 136 km meter gage (1.00 m), 470 km various narrow
gage (privately owned)
Highways: 7,500 km total; 900 km paved, 600 km gravel,
6,000 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 3,100 km
Ports: 1 major (Asuncion), 9 minor (all river)
Civil air: 7 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 940 total, 810 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 19 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: local telecom facilities in Asuncion
good, intercity microwave net; 41,600 telephones (1.5 per
100 popl.); 25 AM, 9 FM stations, and 1 TV station; 1
Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 687,000; 518,000 fit for
military service; average number currently reaching military
age (17) annually, 33,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $41.2 million; about 14.7% of central government
budget
LAND
1,284,640 km2 (other estimates range as low as 1,248,380
km2); 2% cropland, 14% meadows and pastures, 55%
forested, 29% urban, waste, other
Land boundaries: 6,131 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 2,414 km
PEOPLE
Population: 16,818,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.8% (current)
Nationality: noun-Peruvian; adjective-Peruvian
Ethnic divisions: 46% Indian; 38% mestizo (white-
Indian); 15% white; 1% Negro, Japanese, Chinese
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish, Quechua, Aymara
Literacy: 45% to 50%
Labor force: 5.0 million (1975); 42.1% agriculture, 17%
services, 14% manufacturing, 9% trade, 4% construction, 4%
transportation, 2% mining, 4% other
Organized labor: 37.1% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Peru
Type: republic; under military regime since October 1968
Capital: Lima
Political subdivisions: 23 departments with limited
autonomy plus constitutional Province of Callao
Legal system: based on civil law system; military
government rules by decree and functions under Revolution-
ary Statute which supersedes 1933 constitution; legal
education at the National Universities in Lima, Trujillo,
Arequipa, and Cuzco; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
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National holiday: Independence Day, 28 July
Branches: executive, judicial; congress disbanded after 3
October 1968 ouster of President Fernando Belaunde Terry
Government leader: President, General Francisco Mo-
rales Bermudez Cerrutti
Suffrage: obligatory for citizens (defined as adult men
and women and married persons over age 18) until age 60
Elections: June of 1978 a constituent assembly to be
elected to draw up a new constitution; issuance of the new
charter to be followed by presidential and parliamentary
elections in 1980
Political parties and leaders: Popular Action Party (AP),
Fernando Belaunde Terry; American Popular Revolutionary
Alliance (APRA), Victor Raul Haya de la Torre; and Popular
Christian Party (PPC), Luis Bedoya Reyes; Christian
Democratic Party (PDC), Juan Lituma Portocarrero
Voting strength (1963 election): 39% AP-PDC, 34%
APRA, 25% UNO, 1% Communist, 1% other
Communists: pro-Soviet (PCP/S) 2,000; pro-Chinese (2
factions) 1,200
Member of: AIOEC, ASSIMER, CIPEC, FAO, C-77,
GATT, IADB, IAEA, IATP, IBRD, CIPEC, ICAO, IDA,
1DB, IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
LAFTA and Andean Pact, NAM, OAS, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $11.3 billion (1977, in current prices), $680 per
capita; 79% private consumption, 13.2% public consumption,
1.6.3% gross investment; -8.5% net foreign balance (1976);
real growth rate (1977), -0.1%
Agriculture: main crops-wheat, potatoes, beans, rice,
barley, coffee, cotton, sugarcane; imports-wheat, meat,
lard and oils, rice, corn; caloric intake, 2,200 calories per day
per capita (1967)
Fishing: catch 2.0 million metric tons (1977); exports $219
million (1977)
Major industries: mining of metals, petroleum, fishing,
textiles and clothing, food processing, cement, auto assem-
bly, steel, ship-building, metal fabrication
Electric power: 2,073,000 kW capacity (1977); 8 billion
kWh produced (1977), 475 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,726 million (f.o.b., 1977); fish and fish
products, copper, silver, iron, cotton, sugar, lead, zinc,
petroleum, coffee
Imports: $2,131 million (f.o.b., 1977); foodstuffs, machin-
ery, transport equipment, iron and steel semimanufactures,
chemicals, pharmaceuticals
Major trade partners: exports-24% U.S., 15% Latin
America, 21% EC, 14% Japan, 2% U.S.S.R. (1976); imports-
31% U.S., 23% EC, 17% Latin America, 12% Japan (1974)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $223
million loans, $244 million grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $680 million; from other Western
countries (1960-72), $136.1 million; from Communist
countries (1969-76), $282 million; military-assistance from
U.S. (FY49-75), $184 million; from Communist countries
(1974), $545 million
Budget: (1977) $1.8 billion current revenues, $2.9 billion
total expenditures including debt amortization
Monetary conversion rate: 130 soles=US$1 (19 April
1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,148 km total; 1,776 km standard gage (1.435
m), 46 km 0.60-meter gage, 326 km 0.914-meter gage; 14 km
double track
Highways: 52,400 km total; 5,400 km paved, 9,900 km
gravel, 14,400 km improved earth, 22,700 km unimproved
earth
Inland waterways: 8,600 km of navigable tributaries of
Amazon River system and 208 km Lake Titicaca
Pipelines: crude oil, 730 km; natural gas and natural gas
liquids, 64 km
Ports: 7 major, 20 minor
Civil air: 26 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 301 total, 301 usable; 24 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 20 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 46 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 3
seaplane stations
Telecommunications: fairly adequate for most require-
ments; new nationwide radio-relay system; 1 Atlantic Ocean
satellite station; 410,000 telephones (2.5 per 100 pop].); 200
AM, 7 FM, and 31 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,695,000; 2,503,000 fit
for military service; average number currently reaching
military age (20) annually, 167,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $254 million; about 11.4% of central government
budget
PHILIPPINES
LAND
300,440
permanent
kmz; 53% forested, 30%
pasture, 12% other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 0-300 nm (under
an archipelago theory, waters within straight lines joining
appropriate points of outermost islands are considered
internal waters; waters between these baselines and the
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limits described in the Treaty of Paris, December 10, 1898,
the U.S.-Spain Treaty of November 7, 1900, and the
U.S.-U.K. Treaty of January 2, 1930 are considered to be the
territorial sea)
Coastline: about 22,540 km
PEOPLE
Population: 45,883,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Filipino(s); adjective-Philippine
Ethnic divisions: 91.5% Christian Malay, 4% Muslim
Malay, 1.5% Chinese, 3% other
Religion: 83% Roman Catholic, 10% Protestant, 4%
Muslim, 3% Buddhist and other
Language: Tagalog (renamed Pilipino) is the national
language of the Philippine Republic; English is the language
of school instruction and government business
Literacy: about 83%
Labor force: 11 million; 60% agriculture, forestry, fishing,
12% manufacturing, 10.5% commerce, 10.5% government
and services (business, recreation, domestic, personal), 3.5%
transport, storage, communication, 3% construction; 0.5%
other
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of the Philippines
Type: republic
Capital: Manila
Political subdivisions: 72 provinces
Legal system: based on Spanish, Islamic, and Anglo-
American law; parliamentary constitution passed 1973;
judicial review of legislative acts in the Supreme Court; legal
education at University of the Philippines, Ateneo de Manila
University, and 71 other law schools; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations; currently being ruled under
martial law
National holiday: Independence Day, 12 June
Branches: new constitution (currently suspended) pro-
vides for unicameral National Assembly, and a strong
executive branch under a Prime Minister; judicial branch
headed by Supreme Court with descending authority in a
Court of Appeals, courts of First Instance in various
provinces, municipal courts in chartered cities, and justices
of the peace in towns and municipalities; these justices have
considerably more authority than do justices of the peace in
the U.S.
Government leader: President Ferdinand E. Marcos
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: elections held for an interim National Assem-
bly to meet in June
Political parties and leaders: political parties currently in
limbo because of martial law
Communists: about 1,600 armed insurgents
Member of: ADB, ASEAN, ASPAC, Colombo Plan,
ESCAP, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ISO, ITU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $20.7 billion (1977), $463 per capita; 6.1% real
growth, 1976
Agriculture: main crops-rice, corn, coconut, sugarcane,
bananas, abaca, tobacco
Fishing: catch 1.3 million metric tons (1975)
Major industries: mining, agricultural processing, textiles,
chemicals and chemical products
Electric power: 4,076,000 kW capacity (1977); 14.5
billion kWh produced (1977), 315 kWh per capita
Exports: $3,151 million (f.o.b., 1977); coconut products,
sugar, logs and lumber, copper concentrates, bananas,
garments, nickel, abaca
Imports: $3,915 million (f.o.b., 1977); petroleum, indus-
trial equipment, wheat
Major trade partners: (1976) exports-35% U.S., 25%
Japan; imports-28% Japan, 20% U.S.
Aid: commitments 1970-76: U.S. economic, $467.3 mil-
lion, military, $204.8 million; Western (except U.S.), $996.3
million; Eastern Europe, $35.5 million; OPEC, $61.0 million
Budget: (CY78) revenues $3.8 billion, expenditures $4.6
billion, deficit $0.8 billion; 11% military, 89% civilian
Monetary conversion rate: 7.38 pesos=US$1, February
1978
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,503 km total; 2 common-carrier systems
1.067-meter gage totaling about 1,170 km; 19 industrial
systems with 4 different gages totaling 2,333 km; 34%
government owned
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Highways: 109,690 km total (1976); 20,483 km paved;
51,642 km gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized soil surface;
37,565 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 3,219 km; limited to shallow-draft
(less than 1.5 m) vessels
Pipelines: refined products, 251 km
Ports: 11 major, numerous minor
Civil air: approximately 65 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 332 total, 304 usable; 55 with permanent-
surface runways; 8 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 33 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 9,713,000; 6,941,000 fit
for military service; about 448,000 reach military age (20)
annually
Supply: limited small arms and small arms ammunition,
small patrol craft, and helicopter production; other materiel
obtained almost exclusively from U.S.; naval ships and
equipment from Australia, Japan, Singapore, U.S., and Italy;
aircraft and helicopters from West Germany and U.S.
LAND
312,354 km2; 49% arable, 14% other agricultural, 27%
forested, 10% other
Land boundaries: 3,090 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (3 nm
contiguous zone claimed in addition to the territorial sea)
(fishing 12 nm)
Coastline: 491 km
PEOPLE
Population: 35,030,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 1.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Pole(s); adjective-Polish
Ethnic divisions: 98.7% Polish, 0.6% Ukrainians, 0.5%
Belorussians, less than 0.05% Jews, 0.2% other
Religion: 95% Roman Catholic (about 75% practicing),
5% Uniate, Greek Orthodox, Protestant, and other
Language: Polish, no significant dialects
Literacy: about 98%
Labor force: 16.3 million; 38% agriculture, 26% industry,
36% other non-agricultural
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Polish People's Republic (PRL)
Type: Communist state
Capital: Warsaw
Political subdivisions: 49 provinces
Legal system: mixture of Continental (Napoleonic) civil
law and Communist legal theory; constitution adopted 1952;
court system parallels administrative divisions with Supreme
Court, composed of 104 justices, at apex; no judicial review
of legislative acts; legal education at 7 law schools; has not
accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: National Liberation Day, 22 July
Branches: legislative, executive, judicial system domi-
nated by parallel Communist party apparatus
Government leaders: Piotr Jaroszewicz, Premier; Henryk
Jablonski, chairman of Council of State (President)
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: parliamentary and local government every 4
years
Dominant political party and leader: Polish United
Workers' Party (PZPR) (Communist), Edward Gierek, First
Secretary
Voting strength (1975 election): 99% voted for Commu-
nist-approved single slate
Communists: 2,758,000 party members (March 1978)
Other political or pressure groups: National Unity Front
(FJN), including United Peasant Party (ZSL), Democratic
Party (SD), progovernment pseudo-Catholic Pax Association
and Christian Social Association, Catholic independent Znak
group; powerful Roman Catholic Church, Stefan Cardinal
Wyszynski, Primate
Member of: CEMA, GATT, ICAO, ICES, IHO, Indochina
Truce Commission, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study
Group, IPU, ISO, ITC, Korea Truce Commission, U.N. and
all specialized agencies except IMF and IBRD, Warsaw Pact,
WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $95.2 billion in 1977, at 1976 prices, $2,743 per
capita; 1977 growth rate, 5.1%
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POLAND/PORTUGAL
Agriculture: self-sufficient for minimum requirements;
main crops-grain, sugar beets, oilseeds, potatoes, exporter
of livestock products and sugar; importer
calories per day per capita (1970)
Fishing: catch 656,200 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: machine building, iron and steel,
extractive industries, chemicals, shipbuilding, and food
processing (1977),
Crude steel: 17.8 million metric tons produced
about 510 kg. per capita (1977); 109.4
Electric power: 21,675,000 kW capacity
billion kWh produced (1977), 3,135 kWh per capita
Exports: $12,287 million (f.o.b., 1977); 46% machinery
and equipment, 35% fuels, raw materials, and semimanufac-
tures, 10% agricultural and food products, 9% light industrial
Products 41% machinery
imports: $14,646 million (f.o.b., 1977 ; WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 urn (fishing 12
and equipment, 41% fuels, raw materials, and set industry economic zone
tures; 13% agricultural and food products; 5% light industrial nm); 200 urn exclusive (excludes Azores (708 km) and
products (1977); with Coastline: 860 km exc
Major trade partners: $26,933 million ; Madeira (225 km))
Communist countries, 44% with West commer- PEOPLE
Monetary conversion rate: 3.32 zlotys=US$1
33.20 zlotys=US$1 (noncommercial) Population: metropolitan Portugal (including annual
cial); Madeira Islands), 9,786,000 (July 1978), average
Fiscal year: same as calendar year; economic data are and Ma (1 76 to 1 77)
reported for calendar years except for caloric in3akelwhich is growth noun-Portuguese (sing. & p1.); adjective-
reported for the consumption year, 1 July June Nationaratelity: 0.6% Portuguese
in
c
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 26,695 km total; 23, 474kkmsdo double track;
(1.435 m), 2,879 km other gage;
6,308 km electrified; government owned (1976)
Highways: 305,863 km total; 65,000 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block; 98,000 km crushed stone, gravel; 142,863 km
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous Mediterranean s o
mainland, Azores, Madeira Islands; citizens of black African
descent who immigrated to mainland during decolonization
number less than 100,000
tholic, 1% Protestant sects, 2%
Religion: 97% Roman Ca
other
earth (1976) Portuguese
Inland waterways: 3,759 km navigable streams and Language: 70%
canals (1977) Literacy: force: (1976) 3.2 million; 27% agriculture, 36%
Pipelines: 3,540 km for natural gas; 1,515 km for crude Labor industry, 37% services; unemployment-now more than
oil; 322 km for refined products
Freight carried: rail-470 million metric tons (1976), 14%-is largely due to influx of refugees from former
highway-1,950 million colonies, returning migrant workers, and military cutbacks
130.8 billion metric ton/km metric to (1976); waterway-
metric tons, 32.3 billion metric ton/km (1976); excl. ConOranized federation of huese Workerst-NationalIn ersindi
transit metric tons, 1,560 waterway craft cal (GCTP-IN) claims to represent 85% of the labor force;
17.4 million
with 525,600 metric ton capacity (1977) the Socialists and Social Democrats have lost ground over te
with 525,600 0r metric in app with
Gdansk, Gdynia, Szczecin, Swinoujscie), 6 last year despite efforts to improve their standing
Ports: 4 major ( organized labor
minor (1977)
GOVERNMENT bl'
PORTUGAL
LAND z including the Azores
Metropolitan Portugal: 94,276 km ,
and Madeira islands; 48% arable, 6% meadow and pasture,
31% forested, 15% waste and urban, inland water, and other
Land boundaries: 1,207 km
Legal name: Portuguese Repu lc
Type: republic, first government under new constitution
formed July 1976; major Political parties and officers of
all-military Revolutionary Council signed document in
1975 agreeing to multiparty parliamentary
December for d
o electionslgnt Junep1976 of 4 years
f owingypresidentiala
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Capital: Lisbon
Political subdivisions. 18 districts in mainland Portugal;
Portugal's two autonomous regions, the Azores and Madeira
Islands, have 4 districts (3 of them in the Azores); Macao,
Portugal's remaining overseas territory, was granted broad
executive and legislative autonomy in February 1976;
Portugal has not officially recognized the unilateral annex-
ation of Portuguese Timor by Indonesia
Legal system: civil law system; new constitution adopted
April 1976; for next four years, legislative assembly acts to be
reviewed for constitutionality by Revolutionary Council;
vetoes of laws by the Council, through the agency of the
presidency, may be appealed to a Constitutional Commis-
sion as a court of last resort; legal education at Universities of
Lisbon and Coimbra; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction,
with reservations
National holiday: 25 April
Branches: executive with President and Prime Minister,
with 18-member Revolutionary Council as advisory body to
the President; Popularly elected Assembly of the Republic;
independent judici
a
ry
Government leaders: President Antonio Ramalho Eanes;
Prime Minister Mario Soares
Suffrage: universal over age 18, except for those barred by
law for participation in "undemocratic" institutions prior to
April 25, 1974
Elections: national elections for Assembly of the Republic
to be held every 4 years, first Assembly under new
constitution elected April 1976, will sit until October 14,
1980 unless earlier dissolved by the President; nation
election for president to be held every 5 al
years, term of first
constitutional president-elected in June 1976-will end
with 4 year transitional period; local elections to be held
every 3 years, last elections in December 1976
Political parties and leaders: the Portuguese Socialist
Party (PS) is led by Mario Soares, the Social Democratic
Party (PSD), formerly the Popular Democratic Party (PPD),
by Sousa Franco, the Social Democratic Center (CDS) by
Diogo Freitas do Amaral, and the Portuguese Communist
Party (PCP) by Alvaro Cunhal
Voting strength: (1976 Parliamentary election) the
Socialists polled 35% of the vote; the PSD received 24%, the
CDS 16%, and the Communists 15%; (1976 local elections)
PS 33%, PSD 24%, PCP 18%, CDS 17%
Communists: Portuguese Communist Party claims mem-
bership of 142,512 (March 1978)
Member of: Council of Europe, EFTA, FAO, GATT,
IAEA, IATP, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO (restricted membership),
ICES, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMF, IOOC, ISO, ITU, IWC-
International Wheat Council, NATO, OECD, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO WMO WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $14.8 billion est. (1977); breakdown-18% govern-
mentdconsvestinummentption-
;, 8412%n% prietvate consumption; 10% gross
fixe
exports; average annual real
GNP growth 1970-74, 8%; the Portuguese government puts
the change in real GNP at -2.7% in 1975 and 5.8% in 1976,
but -7.0% and +3.3% appear more realistic
Agriculture: generally underdeveloped; main crops-
grains, potatoes, olives, grapes for wine; deficit foods-sugar,
grain, meat, fish, oil seeds; caloric intake, 2,730 calories per
day per capita (1969)
Fishing: landed 368,633 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: textiles and footwear; wood pulp,
paper, and cork; metalworking; oil refining; chemicals; fish
canning; wine
Crude steel: 460,000 tons produced (1976), 50 kg per
capita
Electric power: 4,600,000 kW
capacity billion kWh produced (1977), 1,099 kWh per 9ca (10.8
p
Exports: $1.9 billion (f.o.b. 1977); per capita
textiles, cork and cork principal items-cotton
products, canned fish, wine, timber
and timber products, resin
Imports: $4.4 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
petroleum, cotton, industrial machinery, iron and steel,
chemicals
Major trade partners: 45% EC (12% U.K., 11% W.
Germany, 9% France, 4% Italy); 12% EFTA, 8% U.S., 4%
Spain, 3% Iraq, 3% Saudi Arabia, 3% Japan, (1976)
Aid: economic authorizations: U.S., $178 million
(FY70-76)
Budget: 1977-receipts, $2.7 billion; expenditures, $4.2
billion; deficit, $1.5 billion)
Monetary conversion rate: 1
April, 1977) escudo=US$0.0258 (15
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
RdailCroads: 3,593 km total: state-owned Portuguese Rail-
electrified operates 2,807 km 1.665-meter gage (406 km
roaelectrified and 426 km double track), 760 km meter-gage
(1.000 m); 26 km 1.665-meter gage double track, electrified,
privately-owned
Highways: 29,773 km total; 17,703 km bituminous,
bituminous treatment, concrete and stoneblock; 11,587 km
gravel and crushed stone; 483 km improved earth; plus an
additional 16,898 km of unimproved earth roads (motorable
tracks)
Inland waterways: 820 km navigable; relatively unimpor-
tant to national economy, used by shallow-draft craft limited
to 297 metric ton cargo capacity
Pipelines: crude oil, 11 km
Ports: 6 major, 34 minor
Civil air: 27 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
out)
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Airfields including Azores and Madeira Islands): 50
total, 49 usable; 31 with permanent-surface runways; 1 with
runway over 3,660 m, 11 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 9
with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 6 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: facilities are generally adequate;
1.19 million telephones (12.9 per 100 popl.); 39 AM, 34 FM,
and 42 TV stations; 3 submarine coaxial cables; 2 Atlantic
Ocean satellite stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,256,000; 1,829,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching age (20)
annually, about 76,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $575.8 million; about 14% of central government
budget
QATAR
LAND
About 10,360 km'; negligible amount forested; mostly
desert, waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 56 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 563 km
PEOPLE
Population: 162,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Qatari(s); adjective-Qatari
Ethnic divisions: 56% Arab; 23% Iranian; 14% Pakistani;
7% other
Religion: Muslim
Language: Arabic
Literacy: 10%-15%
Labor force: primarily foreign
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of Qatar
Type: traditional monarchy; independence declared in
1971
Capital: Doha
Legal system: discretionary system of law controlled by
the ruler, although new civil codes are being implemented;
Islamic law is significant in personal matters; a constitution
was promulgated in 1970
National holiday: 3 September
Government leader: Amir Khalifa ibn Hamad Al-Thani
Suffrage: no specific provisions for suffrage laid down
Elections: constitution calls for elections for part of State
Advisory Council, semi-legislative body, but none have been
held
Political parties and pressure groups: none; a few small
clandestine organizations are active
Branches: Council of Ministers; appointive 30-member
Advisory Council
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto),
IBRD, ICAO, ILO, IMF, NAM, OAPEC, OPEC, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $4.0 billion (1976), $22,460 per capita
Agriculture: farming and grazing on small scale; commer-
cial fishing increasing in importance; most food imported;
rice and dates staple diet
Major industries: oil production and refining; crude oil
production from onshore and offshore averaged 435,141 b/d
(1977); 100% takeover was announced in October 1976 of
the Qatar Petroleum Company, still negotiating with Qatar
Shell about offshore fields; oil revenues accrued $2 billion in
1976, representing 95% of government/ royal family income;
major development projects include $7 million harbor at Ad
Dawhah, fertilizer plant, 2 desalting plants, refrigerated
storage for fishing, and a cement plant
Electric power: capacity 300,000 kW (1977); 660 million
kWh produced (1977), 4,000 kWh per capita
Exports: crude oil dominates; exports $2.2 billion (1976)
of which petroleum is $2 billion
Imports: $817 million (c.i.f., 1976)
Aid: aid donor, pledged $450 million 1974, disbursed $200
million
Budget: (1976) budgeted expenditures $986 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Qatar-Dubai rival=US$0.26
(through October 1976)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 805 km total; 442 km bituminous; 362 km
gravel; undetermined mileage of earth tracks
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Pipelines: crude oil, 169 km; natural gas, 97 km
Ports: 1 major (Ad Dawhah), 1 minor
Airfields: 2 total, 1 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways, 1 with runway over 3,660 m
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft, 1 registered in the
U.K.
Telecommunications: international telecom traffic is by
tropospheric scatter through Bahrain; fair domestic facilities;
24,000 telephones (14.8 per 100 popl.); 1 AM station, I FM
station, and 2 TV stations, 1 Indian Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 41,000; about
24,000 fit for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 24 January 1974,
$53,680,900; 18% of central government budget
REUNION
LAND
2,512 km'; two-thirds of island extremely rugged,
consisting of volcanic mountains; 48,600 hectares (less than
one-fifth of the land) under cultivation
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 201 km
PEOPLE
Population: 491,000 (July
rate 1.3% (1-76 to 1-78)
Nationality: noun-Reunionese
Reunionese
Ethnic divisions: most of the population is of thoroughly
intermixed ancestry of French, African, Malagasy, Chinese,
Pakistani, and Indian origin
Religion: 94% Roman Catholic
Language: French (official), Creole widely used
Literacy: over 80% among younger generation
Labor force: primarily agricultural workers; high seasonal
unemployment
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Department of Reunion
Type: overseas department of France; represented in
French Parliament by three Deputies and two Senators
Capital: Saint-Denis
Legal system: French law
Branches: Reunion is administered by a Prefect ap-
pointed by the French Minister of Interior, assisted by a
Secretary-General and an elected 36-man General Council
Government leader: Prefect Paul Cousseran
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: last municipal and general council elections in
1976; .Parliamentary election March 1978
Political parties and leaders: Reunion Communist Party
(RCP) led by Paul Verges, only organized political
movement on island; other political candidates affiliated
with metropolitan French parties, which do not maintain
permanent organizations on Reunion
Voting strength (Parliamentary election 1978): Rally for
the Republic (formerly Union of Democrats for the
Republic) elected one deputy; Giscardian alliance elected
one Republican deputy and one Centrist deputy
Communists: Communist Party small-probably only
15-20 hard-line Communists-but has support among
sugarcane cutters and in Le Port district
Member of: EC, WFTU
ECONOMY
Agriculture: cash crops-almost entirely sugarcane, small
amounts of vanilla and perfume plants; food crops-tropical
fruit and vegetables, manioc, bananas, corn, market garden
produce, also some tea, tobacco, and coffee; food crop
inadequate, most food needs imported
Major industries: 12 sugar processing mills, rum distilling
plants, cigarette factory, 2 tea plants, fruit juice plant,
canning factory, a slaughterhouse, and a number of small
shops producing handicraft items
Electric power: 75,000 kW capacity (1977); 185 million
kWh produced (1977), 370 kWh per capita
Exports: $62 million (f.o.b., 1975); 90% sugar, 4% perfume
essences, 5% rum and molasses, 1% vanilla and tea (1974)
Imports: $410 million (c.i.f., 1975); manufactured goods,
food, beverages, and tobacco, machinery and transportation
equipment, raw materials and petroleum products
Major trade partners: France (in 1970 supplied 62% of
Reunions imports, purchased 76% of its exports); Mauritius
(supplied 12% of imports)
Aid: major recipient of French foreign aid in Africa;
French economic aid, $43.8 million (1974)
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Monetary conversion rate: 4.705 French francs=US$l
Fiscal year: probably calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 1,983 km total; 1,683 km paved, 300 km
gravel, crushed stone, or stabilized earth
Ports: 1 major (Port des Galets)
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 7 total, 7 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: international telecom traffic is by
tropospheric scatter through Bahrain; fair domestic facilities;
31,709 telephones (6.5 per 100 popl.); 1 AM station, 1 FM
Station, and 2 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: military age males included with
France
RHODESIA
LAND
391,090 km2; 40% arable (of which 6% cultivated); 60%
available for extensive cattle grazing; 39% European
alienated lands (farmed by modern methods), 48% African,
7% national land, 6% not alienated
Land boundaries: 3,017 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,972,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.4% (7-72 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Rhodesian(s); adjective-Rhodesian
Ethnic divisions: 96% African, less than 4% European,
less than 0.5% coloreds and Asians
Religion: 51% syncretic (part Christian, part animist),
24% Christian, 24% animist, a few Muslim
Language: English official; Chishona and Sindebele also
widely used
Literacy: 25%-30%; of whites, nearly 100%
Labor force: (1972) 778,000 Africans (including some
migrants from Zambia and Malawi), 108,000 Europeans,
Asians, and coloreds (people of mixed heritage); 35%
agriculture, 25% mining, manufacturing, construction, 40%
transport and services
Organized labor: about one-third of European wage
earners are unionized, but only a small minority of Africans
(1966)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Colony of Southern Rhodesia
Type: Self-proclaimed independent state since 1965 (not
recognized by U.S.); provisional settlement with U.K. in
November 1971 cancelled by U.K. in May 1972 in response
to Pearce Commission's conclusion that its terms were
unacceptable to the majority of black Rhodesians. A
conference in Geneva in late 1976, failed to agree on a new
multiracial interim government in Rhodesia to govern the
country during a transition to black majority rule. In March
1978, Prime Minister Smith and three black nationalist
leaders set up an interim government to prepare for transfer
to black majority rule by 31 December 1978. The interim
goverment has not been recognized by the U.S. and U.K.,
who are attempting to negotiate a settlement that will
include external nationalist leaders.
Capital: Salisbury
Political subdivisions: 11 magisterial districts
Legal system: Smith government implemented a republi-
can constitution on 2 March 1970 which institutionalized
white rule
Branches: President Wrathall is ceremonial head of state;
executive council (cabinet) lead by Prime Minister Smith;
National Assembly gives highly disproportionate representa-
tion to white minority-50 white constituency seats and 16
black constituency seats
Government leaders: Prime Minister Ian Smith and
President John Wrathall
Suffrage: franchise is based on income, property holdings,
and education; there are separate rolls for Africans and
non-Africans
Elections: must be held every 5 years
Political parties and leaders: Rhodesian Front, Prime
Minister Smith; Rhodesian Action Party, Ian Sandeman;
National Unifying Force, Allan Savory; Zimbabwe United
People's Organization, Jeremiah Chirau; United African
National Council, Bishop Abel Muzorewa; African National
Council/Sithole, Ndabaningi Sithole
Voting strength (1977 elections): Rhodesian Front won all
50 white constituency seats in Parliament in August 1977
elections
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Communists: negligible
Other pressure groups and leaders: external black
nationalists Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe are loosely
allied in the Patriotic Front
Member of: ITU
ECONOMY
GDP: $3.0 billion (1976), $460 per capita; economy
contracting since 1974
Agriculture: main crops-tobacco, corn, sugar, cotton;
livestock; self-sufficient in foodstuffs
Major industries: mining, steel, textiles, chemicals, and
vehicles
Electric power: 1,453,000 kW capacity (1977); 7.5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,000 kWh per capita
Exports: $652 million (f.o.b., 1973), including net gold
sales and reexports; tobacco, asbestos, copper, meat, chrome,
gold, nickel, clothing, sugar
Imports: $541 million (c.i.f., 1973); machinery, petroleum
products, wheat, transport equipment
Net merchandise earnings: $264 million (.1976)
Major trade partner: South Africa
Aid: no substantial military or economic aid
Budget: FY77-revenues $797 million, expenditures $887
million, deficit $40 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Rhodesian dollar=US$1.50
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,239 km narrow gage (1.067 m); 41 km double
track
Highways: 78,428 km total; 7,995 km paved, 32,855 km
crushed stone, gravel, stabilized soil, or improved earth;
37,578 km unimproved earth (est.)
Inland waterways: 280 km on Lake Kariba
Pipelines: 8 km crude oil (nonoperating)
Airfields: 369 total, 364 usable; 16 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, I with runway
2,440-3,659 m, 30 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Civil air: 16 major transport aircraft (including 2 leased
out)
Telecommunications: system is one of the best in Africa;
consists of radio-relay links, open-wire lines, and radiocom-
munication stations; principal center Salisbury, secondary
center Bulawayo; 190,300 telephones (2.8 per 100 popl.); 8
AM, I FM, and 5 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,511,000; 923,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually, 71,000
ROMANIA
LAND
237,503 km2; 44% arable, 19% other agriculture, 27%
forested, 10% other
Land boundary: 2,969 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 225 km
PEOPLE
Population: 21,868,000 (July
growth rate 0.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Romanian(s); adjective-Romanian
Ethnic divisions: 87% Romanian, 8% Hungarian, 2%
German, 3% other
Religion: 14 million Romanian Orthodox, 1 million
Roman Catholic, 1 million Protestants, 60,000 Jews, 30,000
Muslims
Language: Romanian, Hungarian, German
Literacy: 98%-99% of total population
Labor force: 10.2 million (1975); 38% agriculture, 31%
industry, 31% other nonagricultural
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Socialist Republic
Type: Communist state
Capital: Bucharest
Political subdivisions: 39 counties and 46 municipalities,
including Bucharest that has administrative status equal to a
county
Legal system: mixture of civil law system and Communist
legal theory which increasingly reflects Romanian traditions;
constitution adopted 1965; legal education at University of
Bucharest and two other law schools; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Liberation Day, 23 August
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Branches: Presidency; Council of Ministers; the Grand
National Assembly, under which is Office of Prosecutor
General and Supreme Court; Council of State
Government leaders: Nicolae Ceausescu, President of the
Socialist Republic, head of state; Manea Manescu, Prime
Minister
Suffrage: universal over age 18, compulsory
Elections: elections held every 5 years for Grand National
Assembly deputies and local people's councils
Political parties and leaders: Communist Party of
Romania only functioning party, Nicolac Ceausescu, Secre-
tary General
Voting strength (1975 election): overall participation
reached 99.96%; of those registered to vote (14,900,032),
98.8% voted for party candidates
Communists: 2,747,000 (end of 1975)
Member of: CEMA, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
Warsaw Pact, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $57.0 billion (1977, in 1976 prices), $2,630 per
capita; 1977 real growth rate, 3.6%
Agriculture: net exporter; main crops-corn, wheat,
oilseed; livestock-cattle, hogs, sheep; caloric intake, 118%
of requirements
Fish catch: 124,000 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: machinery, metals, fuels, chemicals,
textiles, food processing, timber processing
Shortages: iron ore, coking coal, metallurgical coke,
cotton fibers, natural rubber
Crude steel: 11.5 million metric tons produced (1977),
527 kg per capita
Electric power: 13,200,000 kW capacity (1977); 59.8
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,750 kWh per capita
Exports: $7.0 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 26% machinery and
equipment; 16% foodstuffs; 16% consumer goods; 24% fuels,
metals, materials; 18% other (1976)
Imports: $7.0 billion (mixture f.o.b. and c.i.f., 1977); 32%
machinery and equipment; 41% fuels, metals, raw materials;
8% foodstuffs; 19% other (1976)
Major trade partners: $14.0 billion in 1977; 57%
non-Communist countries, 43% Communist countries (18%
U.S.S.R.) (1976)
Monetary conversion rate: 4.47 lei=US$1 (commercial),
12 lei=US$l (tourist)
Fiscal year: same as calendar year; economic data
reported for calendar years except for caloric intake, which
is reported for consumption year, 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 12,080 km total; 10,467 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 1,600 km narrow gage, 1.3 km broad gage; 1,407
km electrified, 2,040 km double track; government owned
(1976)
Highways: 77,768 km total; 13,470 km concrete, asphalt,
stone block; 14,412 km asphalt treated, gravel, crushed stone;
49,886 km earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 1,691 km (1977)
Pipelines: 2,735 km crude oil; 1,429 km refined products;
5,149 km natural gas
Freight carried: rail-238.0 million metric tons, 67.6
billion metric ton/km (1976); highway-442.2 million
metric tons, 9.9 billion metric ton/km (1976); waterway-
7.9 million metric tons, 2.1 billion metric ton/km in
approximately 515 waterway craft, with 493,750 metric ton
capacity (1977)
Ports: 5 major (Constanta, Galati, Braila, Mangalia,
Tulcea), 1 minor (1978)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget (announced): for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, 12.0 billion lei; about 3.8% of total budget
RWANDA
LAND
25,900 km?; almost all the arable land, about 1/3 under
cultivation, about 1 /3 pastureland
Land boundaries:, 877 km
PEOPLE
Population: 4,444,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.9% (current)
Nationality: noun Rwandan(s); adjective-Rwandan
Ethnic divisions: 90% Hutu, 9% Tutsi, 1% Twa
(Pygmoid)
Religion: 45% Catholic, 9% Protestant, 1% Muslim, rest
animist
Language: Kinyarwanda and French official; Kiswahili
used in commercial centers
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RWANDA/ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA
Literacy: 10% in French and Kinyarwanda
Labor force: less than 5% in cash economy
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Rwanda
Type: republic, presidential system in which military
leaders hold key offices; 1962 constitution still in force
except for Title V on the National Assembly
Capital: Kigali
Political subdivisions: 10 prefectures, subdivided into
142 communes
Legal system: based on German and Belgian civil law
systems and customary law; constitution adopted 1962;
judicial review of legislative acts in the Supreme Court; has
not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 July
Branches: President,
Government leader:
mana, Head of State
Suffrage: universal
and 15-member cabinet
Major General Juvenal Hahyari-
allowed by present government; elections of Communal
Counsellors held November 1974
Political parties and leaders: National Revolutionary
Movement for Development, General Habyarimana (offi-
cially not a party-a "development movement" only)
Communists: no Communist party
Member of: AFDB, EAMA, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $603 million (1976 provisional), $140 per capita
Agriculture: cash crops-mainly coffee, tea, some pyre-
thrum; main food crops-bananas, cassava; stock raising;
self-sufficiency declining; country imports foodstuffs
Major industries: mining of cassiterite (tin ore), wolfram
(tungsten ore), agricultural processing, and light consumer
goods
Electric power: 35,000 kW capacity (1977); 142 million
kWh produced (1977), 32 kWh per capita
Exports: $104 million (f.o.b., 1976); mainly coffee, tea,
pyrethrum, cassiterite
Imports: $103.7 million (c.i.f., 1976); textiles, foodstuffs,
machines, equipment
Major trade partners: U.S., Belgium, West Germany,
Kenya
Aid: external aid amounted to $52 million in 1974 with
Belgium providing about 30% of this amount, the European
Development Fund 15%, and World Bank about 15%; other
donors include France, Canada, Germany, U.S., Kuwait,
Abu Dhabi, PRC, UNDP, and Libya
Budget: revenues $71 million; expenditures $53.8 million
(1976 provisional)
Monetary conversion rate: 92.84
(official) since January 1974
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 9,020 km total; 320 km paved, 2,700 km
gravel and/or improved earth, 6,000 km unimproved
Inland waterways: Lake Kivu navigable by barges and
native craft
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 9 total, 9 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 1,220-2,439 m, 1 with runway
2,440-3,659 m
Telecommunications: low-capacity radio-relay system
centered on Kigali; 3,600 telephones (0.1 per 100 Pop].); 2
AM, I FM, no TV stations; Symphonie COMSAT station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 998,000; 503,000 fit for
military service; no conscription; 46,000 reach military age
(18) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $11,172,295; 19% of central government budget
ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA
ANGUILLA
ST. CHRISTOPHER % NEVIS ? uP-
S
S
LAND
389 km2; 40% arable, 10% pasture,
wasteland and built-on
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 193 km
PEOPLE
Population: 56,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.9% (current)
Ethnic divisions: mainly of African Negro descent
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CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA/ST. LUCIA
Major industries: sugar processing, salt extraction
Electric power: 15,000 kW capacity (1977); 32 million
kWh produced (1977), 460 kWh per capita
Exports: $6.8 million (f.o.b., 1973); sugar, molasses, cotton,
salt, copra
Imports: $12.0 million (c.i.f., 1973); foodstuffs, fuel,
manufactures
Major trade partners: exports-50% U.S., 35% U.K.;
imports-21% U.K., 17% Japan, 11% U.S. (1973)
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dol-
lars=US$l (July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 57 km, narrow gage (0.760 m) on St. Kitts for
sugar cane
Highways: 300 km total; 100 km paved, 150 km otherwise
improved, 50 km unimproved earth
Ports: 3 minor (1 on each island)
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 3 total, 3 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: good interisland VHF/UHF radio
connections and international link via Antigua; about 2,500
telephones (4.4 per 100 popl.); 3 AM and 5 TV stations
Nationality: noun-Kittsian(s), Nevisian(s), Anguillan(s);
adjective-Kittsian, Nevisian, Anguillan
Religion: Church of England, other Protestant sects,
Roman Catholic
Language: English
Literacy: about 80%
Labor force: 19,616 (1960 est.)
Organized labor: 6,700
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla
Type: dependent territory with full internal autonomy as
a British "Associated State"; Anguilla formally seceded in
May 1967 but has not been recognized as an independent
state by any government; in July 1968 a legislative council
headed by Ronald Webster was elected to govern Anguilla;
in March 1969 the U.K. sent troops to Anguilla, placing the
island again under colonial rule; in 1971, Anguilla reverted
to its former colonial relationship with the U.K. although
nominally remaining part of the Associated state of St.
Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla; Webster became leader of
Anguillan Council after constitutionally held elections
(1972); in February 1976, the U.K. granted a new
constitution to Anguilla which changed its status to that of a
crown colony; in February 1977 Emile Gumbs replaced
Webster as Chief Minister
Capital: Basseterre
Political subdivisions: 10 districts
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
of 1960; highest judicial organ is Court of Appeal of
Leeward and Windward Islands
Branches: legislative, 10-member popularly elected
House of Assembly; executive, cabinet headed by Premier
Government leaders: Acting Premier C. A. P. Southwell
for ailing Premier Robert Bradshaw; U.K. Governor, Probyn
Inniss
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage
Elections: at least every 5 years; most recent December
1975
Political parties and leaders: St. Chirstopher-Nevis-An-
guilla Labor Party, Robert L. Bradshaw; People's Action
Movement (PAM), William Herbert; Nevis Reformation
Party (NRP), Ivor Stevens
Voting strength (December 1975 election): St. Christo-
pher-Nevis-Anguilla Labor Party won 7 seats in the House of
Assembly, NRP won 2, and 1 seat remains open for Anguilla
which did not participate in the election
Communists: none known
Member of: CARICOM, ISO
ECONOMY
GDP: $14.7 million (1970), $210 per capita
Agriculture: main crops-sugar on St. Christopher, cotton
on Nevis
ST. LUCIA
LAND
616 kmQ; 50% arable, 3% pasture, 19% forest, 5% unused
but potentially productive, 23% wasteland and built-on
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 158 km
PEOPLE
Population: 119,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.7% (current)
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ST. LUCIA/ST. VINCENT
Nationality: noun-St. Lucian(s); adjective-St.
Ethnic divisions: mainly of African Negro
Religion: predominantly Roman Catholic
Language: English, French patois
Literacy: about 80%
Labor force: 38,000 (1969); 50%
unemployment (1975)
Organized labor: 20%
Lucian
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of St. Lucia
Type: dependent territory with full internal autonomy as
a British "Associated State"
Capital: Castries
Political subdivisions: 16 parishes
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
of 1960; highest judicial body is Court of Appeal of Leeward
and Windward Islands
Branches: legislative, 17-member popularly elected
House of Assembly; executive, cabinet headed by Premier
Government leaders: Premier John Compton; U.K.
Governor Sir Allen Lewis
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage
Elections: every 5 years; most recent May 1974
Political parties and leaders: United Worker's Party
(UWP), John Compton; St. Lucia Labor Party (SLP), Allan
Louisy
Voting strength (1974 election): UWP (53%) won 10 of
the 17 elected seats in House of Assembly; SLP (45%) won 7
seats; independents (2%) no seats
Communists: negligible
Member of: CARICOM
ECONOMY
GDP: $60 million (1974 est.), $530 per capita; real growth
rate 1974, negligible
Agriculture: main crops-bananas, copra, sugar, cocoa,
spices
Major industries: tourism, time processing
Shortages: food, machinery, capital goods
Electric power: 14,000 kW capacity (1977); 40 million
kWh produced (1977), 365 kWh per capita
Exports: $17 million (f.o.b., 1976); sugar, bananas, cocoa
Imports: $47 million (c.i.f., 1976); foodstuffs, machinery
and equipment, fertilizers, petroleum products
Major trade partners: 51% U.K., 9% Canada, 17% U.S.
(1970)
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dol-
lars=US$1 (July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 750 km total; 450 km paved; 300 km otherwise
improved
Ports: 1 major (Castries), I minor
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways, I with runway 2,440-3,659 in, 1 with
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: fully automatic telephone system
with 6,600 telephones (5.8 per 100 popl.); direct radio-relay
link with Martinique; interisland tropospheric links to
Barbados and Antigua; 3 AM stations, 1 TV station
ST. VINCENT
LAND
389 km, (including northern Grenadines); 50% arable, 3%
pasture, 44% forest, 3% wasteland and built-on
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 84 km
PEOPLE
Population: 105,000 (July 1978), average annual
rate 1.5% (4-60 to 7-75)
Nationality: noun-St. Vincentian(s) or Vincentian(s);
adjectives-St. Vincentian or Vincentian
Ethnic divisions: mainly of African Negro descent;
remainder mixed with some white and East Indian and
Carib Indian
Religion: Church of England, Methodist, Roman Catholic
Language: English, some French patois
Literacy: about 80%
Labor force: 50,000 (1972 est.); about 60% unemployed
Organized labor: 10% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of St. Vincent
Type: dependent territory with full internal autonomy as
a British "Associated State"
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Capital: Kingstown
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
of 1960; highest judicial body is Court of Appeal of Leeward
and Windward Islands
Government leaders: Premier R. Milton Cato; Governor
General (U.K.) Sir Rupert G. John
Suffrage: universal adult suffrage (18 years old and over)
Elections: every 5 years; most recent December 9, 1974
Political parties and leaders: People's Political Party
(PPP), Ebenezer Joshua; St. Vincent Labor Party (LP), R.
Milton Cato; Democratic Freedom Movement, Parnell
Campbell and Kenneth John
Voting strength (1975 election): LP 10 seats, PPP 2 seats,
independent 1 seat in the Legislature
Communists: negligible; Marxist opposition group, Youlon
United Liberation Organization (Yulimo)
Member of: CARICOM
ECONOMY
GDP: $20 million (1971 est.), $200 per capita; 6.9%
growth in 1971
Agriculture: main crops-bananas, arrowroot, coconut
Major industries: food processing
Electric power: 6,500 kW capacity (1977); 18 million
kWh produced (1977), 190 kWh per capita
Exports: $4.7 million (f.o.b., 1973); bananas, arrowroot,
copra
Imports: $18.6 million (c.i.f., 1973); fertilizer, flour,
transportation equipment, lumber, textiles
Major trade partners: exports-61% U.K., 30% CARI-
COM, 9% U.S.; imports-29% CARICOM, 28% U.K., 9%
Canada, 9% U.S. (1972)
Monetary conversion rate: 2.70 East Caribbean dol-
lars=US$1 (July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 550 km total; 200 km paved; 200 km otherwise
improved; 150 km unimproved earth
Ports: 1 major, 1 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 5 total, 4 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways, 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: islandwide fully automatic tele-
phone system with 4,900 sets (4.8 per 100 popl.); VHF/UHF
interisland links to Barbados and the Grenadines; 2 AM
stations
LAND
62 km2; 74% cultivated, 22% meadows and pastures, 4%
built-on
Land boundaries: 34 km
PEOPLE
Population: 20,000 (official estimate for 30 June 1976)
Nationality: noun-Sanmarinese (sing. & pl.); adjective-
Sanmarinese
Religion: Roman Catholic
Language: Italian
Literacy: illiteracy relatively insignificant
Labor force: approx. 4,300
Organized labor: General Democratic Federation of
Sanmarinese Workers (affiliated with ICFTU) has about
1,800 members; Communist-dominated Camera del Lavoro,
about 1,000 members
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of San Marino
Type: republic (dates from 4th century A.D.); in 1862 the
Kingdom of Italy concluded a treaty guaranteeing the
independence of San Marino; although legally sovereign, San
Marino is vulnerable to pressure from the Italian
Government
Capital: San Marino
Political subdivisions: San Marino is divided into 9
castelli: Acquaviva, Borgo Maggiore, Chiesanuova, Dog-
manano, Faetano, Fiorentino, Monte Giardino, San Marino,
Serravalle
Legal system: based on civil law system with Italian law
influences; electoral law of 1926 serves some of the functions
of a constitution; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
Branches: the Grand and General Council is the
legislative body elected by popular vote; its 60 members
serve 5-year terms; Council in turn elects two Captains-Re-
gent who exercise executive power for term of 6 months, the
Council of State whose members head government adminis-
trative departments and the Council of Twelve, the supreme
judicial body; actual executive power is wielded by the
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and the Secretary of
State for Internal Affairs
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Government leaders (in caretaker status since fall of
government 17 November 1977): Secretary of State for
Foreign and Political Affairs and for Information, Giancarlo
Ghironzi (Christian Democratic party); Secretary of State for
Internal Affairs and Justice, Clara Boscaglia (Christian
Democratic party); Secretary of State for Budget, Finance,
and Planning, Remy Giacomini (Socialist Party)
Suffrage: universal (since 1960)
Elections: elections to the Grand and General Council
required at least every 5 years; an election was held 28 May
1978 in effort to resolve government crisis pending since
November 1977
Political parties and leaders: Christian Democratic party
(DCS), Gian Luigi Berti; Social Democratic Party (PSDSM),
Alvaro Casali; Socialist Party (PSS), Remy Giacomini;
Communist Party (PCS), Umberto Barulli; People's Demo-
cratic Party (PDP), leader unknown; Committee for the
Defense of the Republic (CDR), leader unknown
Voting strength (1974 election): 39.6% DCS, 23.7% PCS,
15.4% PSDIS, 13.9% PSS, 1.9% PDP, 2.9% CDR
Communists: approx. 300 members (number of sympa-
thizers cannot be determined); PSS, in government with
Christian Democrats since March 1973, formed a govern-
ment with the PCS from the end of World War II to 1957
Other political parties or pressure groups: political
parties influenced by policies of their counterparts in Italy,
the two Socialist parties are not united
Member of: ICJ, International Institute for Unification of
Private Law, International Relief Union, IRC, UPU
ECONOMY
Principal economic activities of San Marino are farming,
livestock raising, light manufacturing, and tourism; the
largest share of government revenue is derived from the sale
of postage stamps throughout the world and from payments
by the Italian government in exchange for Italy's monopoly
in retailing tobacco, gasoline, and a few other goods; main
problem is finding additional funds to finance badly needed
water and electric power systems expansions
Agriculture: principal crops are wheat (average annual
output about 4,400 metric tons/year) and grapes (average
annual output about 700 metric tons/year); other grains,
fruits, vegetables, and animal feedstuffs are also grown;
livestock population numbers roughly 6,000 cows, oxen, and
sheep; cheese and hides are most important livestock
products
Electric power: obtained from Italy, 1977
Manufacturing: consists mainly of cotton textile produc-
tion at Serravalle, brick and tile production at Dogane,
cement production at Acquaviva, Dogane, and Fiorentino,
and pottery production at Borgo Maggiore; some tanned
hides, paper, candy, baked goods, Moscato wine, and gold
and silver souvenirs are also produced
Foreign transactions: dominated by tourism; in summer
months 20,000 to 30,000 foreigners visit San Marino every
day; a number of hotels and restaurants have been built in
recent years to accommodate them; remittances from
Sanmarinese abroad also represent an important net foreign
inflow; commodity trade consists primarily of exchanging
building stone, lime, wood, chestnuts, wheat, wine, baked
goods, hides, and ceramics for a wide variety of consumer
manufactures
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: about 104 km
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: none
Telecommunications: automatic telephone system serv-
ing 5,700 telephones (28.1 per 100 popl.); no radiobroadcast-
ing or television facilities
LAND
964 km2 (Sao Tome, 855 km2 and Principe, 109 km2;
including small islets of Pedras Tinhosas)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 6 nm (fishing 12 nm)
Coastline: estimated 209 km
PEOPLE
Population: 75,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1972)
Nationality: noun-Sao Tomean(s): adjective-Sao
Tomean
Ethnic divisions: native Sao Tomeans, migrant Cape
Verdians, Portuguese
Religion: Roman Catholic, Evangelical Protestant,
Seventh Day Adventist
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SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE/SAUDI ARABIA
Language: Portuguese official
Literacy: estimated at 5%-10%
Labor force: most of population engaged in subsistence
agriculture and fishing; nearly half the island's work force,
about 10,000 people, are unemployed, the other half work
on cocoa plantations
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic
Principe
Republic of Sao Tome and
Type: republic established when independence received
from Portugal in July 1975; constitution adopted December
1975
Capital: Sao Tome
Legal system: based on Portuguese law system and
customary law; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 12 July
Branches: Da Costa heads the government assisted by a
cabinet of ministers
Government leaders: President Manuel Pinto
Prime Minister Miguel Anjos da Cuna Lisboa
Suffrage: universal for age 18 and over
Da Costa,
Trovoada
Elections: elections were held July 1975 for the President
Political parties and leaders: Movement for the Liber-
ation of Sao Tome and Principe (MLSTP), Secretary-General
Manuel Pinto Da Costa
Communists: no Communist
Communist sympathizers
party, probably
Member of: G-77, NAM, OAU, U.N.
ECONOMY
GNP: $20 million (1975 estimate); per capita income $250
(1975 est.)
Agriculture: cash crops-cocoa, copra, coconut, coffee,
palm oil, bananas
Major industries: food processing on small scale, timber
Electric power: 3,000 kW capacity (1977); 5 million kWh
produced (1977), 70 kWh per capita
Exports: $8.5 million (f.o.b., 1976); mainly cocoa (90%),
copra (7%), coconut, coffee, palm oil
Imports: $10 million (c.i.f., 1976); communications
equipment, light and heavy vehicles, food products,
beverages, fuels and lubricants
Major trade partners: main partner, Portugal; followed
by Netherlands, West Germany, African neighbors
Aid: Portugal remains principal aid donor; however, the
PRC and UNDP have established substantial programs of
technical assistance and the Romanians and Cubans have
somewhat smaller programs; the U.S. is providing some
training for Sao Tomeans under regional AID programs
Budget: balanced at an estimated $6.6 million (1975)
Monetary conversion rate: 40.64 escudos=US$1 (Novem-
ber 1977)
Fiscal year: probably calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Ports: 1 major (Sao Tome)
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 4 total, 4 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: minimal system; 750 telephones
(1.0 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, 1 FM, and no TV stations
SAUDI ARABIA
LAND
Estimated at about 2,331,000 km2 (boundaries undefined
and disputed); 1% agricultural, 1% forested, 98% desert,
waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 4,537 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
Coastline: 2,510 km
PEOPLE
Population: 7,862,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Saudi(s); adjective-Saudi Arabian or
Saudi
Ethnic divisions: 90% Arab, 10% Afro-Asian (est.)
Religion: 100% Muslim
Language: Arabic
Literacy: 15% (est.)
Labor force: about 33% (one-half foreign) of population;
40% agriculture and herding, 12% construction, 12% service,
12% government, 11% commerce, 13% other
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Type: monarchy
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SAUDIA ARABIA/SENEGAL
Capital: Riyadh; foreign ministry and foreign diplomatic
representatives located in Jiddah
Political subdivisions: 18 amirates
Legal system: largely based on Islamic law, several
secular codes have been introduced; commercial disputes
handled by special committees; has not accepted compulsory
ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 23 September
Branches: King Khalid (Al Saud, Khalid ibn Abd al-Aziz)
rules in consultation with royal family (especially Crown
Prince Fahd), and Council of Ministers
Government leader: King Khalid
Communists: negligible
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, IWC-International
Wheat Council, NAM, OAPEC, OPEC, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $48 billion (1976 est.), $8,300 per capita; annual
growth in real non-oil GNP approx. 15% (1973/76 average,
non-oil)
Agriculture: dates, grains, livestock; not self-sufficient in
food
Major industries: petroleum production 8.6 million b/d
(1976); payments to Saudi Arabian Government, $31 billion
(1976 est.); cement production and small steel-rolling mill
and oil refinery; several other light industries, including
factories producing detergents, plastic products, furniture,
etc.; PETROMIN, a semipublic agency associated with the
Ministry of Petroleum, has recently completed a major
fertilizer plant
Electric power: 2,930,000 kW capacity (1977); 6.5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 839 kWh per capita
Exports: $35.5 billion (f.o.b., 1976); 99% petroleum and
petroleum products
Imports: $13.4 billion (c.i.f., 1976); manufactured goods,
transportation equipment, construction materials, and proc-
essed food products
Major trade partners: exports-U.S., Western Europe,
Japan; imports--U.S., Japan, West Germany
Monetary conversion rate: I Saudi riyal=US$0.28 as of
February 1976 (linked to SDR, freely convertible)
Fiscal year: follows Islamic year; the 1973-74 Saudi fiscal
year covers the period 30 July 1973 through 1 July 1974
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 575 km standard gage (1.435 m)
Highways: 17,850 km total; 10,750 km bituminous, 7,100
km gravel and improved earth, undetermined kilometers of
earth roads and tracks
Pipelines: 2,430 km crude oil; 386 km refined products;
98 km natural gas
Ports: 3 major (Jidda, Ad Damman, Ras Tanura), 6 minor
Civil air: 77 major transport aircraft (including 10 leased
in)
Airfields: 119 total, 94 usable; 28 with permanent-surface
runways; 15 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 43 with runways
1,220-2,439 m, 6 with runways over 3,660 m
Telecommunications: fair system exists, major expansion
program underway with microwave, coaxial cable, satellite
systems; 200,000 telephones (2.5 per 100 pop].); 6 AM, 1 FM,
I1 TV stations, 1 submarine cable; 2 Intelsat stations, several
domestic satellite stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,810,000; 1,022,000 fit
for military service; about 66,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 1 July 1978,
$9,528 million; about 28% of central government budget
SENEGAL
LAND
196,840 km2; 13% forested,
cultivated), 47% built-up areas,
Land boundaries: 2,680 km
WATER
40% agricultural (12%
waste, etc.
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 150
200 nm); 200 nm exclusive economic zone
Coastline: 531 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,380,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Senegalese
Senegalese
(sing. & p1.); adjective-
Ethnic divisions: 36% Wolof, 17.5 Fulani, 16.5 Serer, 9%
Tukulor, 9% Dyola, 6.5% Malinke, 4.5% other African, 1%
Europeans and Lebanese
Religion: 80% Muslim, 15% animist, 5% Christian (mostly
Roman Catholic)
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Language: French official, but regular use limited to
literate minority; most Senegalese speak own tribal language;
use of Wolof vernacular spreading-now spoken to some
degree by nearly half the population
Literacy: 5%-10% (est.) in 14 plus age group
Labor force: 1,732,000; about 80% subsistence agricul-
tural workers; about 170,000 wage earners
Organized labor: majority of wage-labor force repre-
sented by unions; however, dues-paying membership very
limited, three labor central unions, major central is CNTS,
an affiliate of governing party
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Senegal
Type: republic
Capital: Dakar
Political subdivisions: 8 regions, subdivided into 27
departments, 95 arrondissements
Legal system: based on French civil law system;
constitution adopted 1960, revised 1963 and 1970; judicial
review of legislative acts in Supreme Court (which also
audits the government's accounting office); legal education
at University of Dakar; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 4 April
Branches: government dominated by President who is
assisted by Prime Minister, appointed by President and
subject to dismissal by President or censure by National
Assembly; 100-member National Assembly, elected for 5
years (effective 1978); President elected for 5-year term
(effective 1978) by universal suffrage; judiciary headed by
Supreme Court, with members appointed by President
Government leaders: Leopold Sedar Senghor, President;
Abdou Diouf, Prime Minister
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: presidential and legislative elections held
February 1978 for 5-year term
Political parties and leaders: legal parties are Parti
Socialiste (PS), ruling party led by President Leopold
Senghor; Parti Democratique Senegalaise (PDS), "liberal
democratic" party founded July 1974, and "Marxist-Lenin-
ist" African Independence Party (PAI), legalized in August
1976; unauthorized parties include clandestine PAI splinter
group, leftist Rassemblement Nationale Democratique, and
Parti Communiste Senegalais (PCS)
Communists: small number of Communists and sympa-
thizers associated with PAI and PCS
Other political or pressure groups: students and teachers
occasionally strike
Member of: AFDB, APC, CEAO, EAMA, ECA,
ECOWAS, EIB (associate), FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, NAM,
OAU, OCAM, OMVS (Organization for the Development of
the Senegal River Valley), U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $1.7 billion (1976), $360 per capita; real growth
-2.3% in 1976
Agriculture: main crops-peanuts, millet, sorghum, man-
ioc, rice; peanuts primary cash crop; production of food
crops increasing but still insufficient for domestic re-
quirements
Fishing: catch 361,673 metric tons (1975); exports $30.9
million (1974)
Major industries: fishing, agricultural processing plants,
light manufacturing, mining
Electric power: 183,850 kW capacity (1977); 603 million
kWh produced (1977), 115 kWh per capita
Exports: $503 million (f.o.b., 1976); peanuts and peanut
products; phosphate rock; canned fish
Imports: $663 million (c.i.f., 1976); food, consumer goods,
machinery, transport equipment
Major trade partners: France, EC (other than France),
and franc zone
Aid: economic-France (1966-70), $115 million; China
(1976), $51.8 million; U.S. (FY61-76), $69 million; U.S.S.R.,
$7.6 million; EC (1961-73), $154 million; military-U.S.
(FY61-76), $2.8 million
Budget: 1978-balanced at $629 million
Monetary conversion rate: francs; about 242.69 Com-
munaute Financiere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November
1977, floating
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,033 km meter gage (1.00 m); 64 km double
track
Highways: 13,589 km total; 2,547 km paved, 11,042 km
other
Inland waterways: 1,505 km
Ports: 1 major (Dakar), 2 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased in)
Airfields: 27 total, 27 usable; 11 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 19 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 3 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: relatively advanced for Africa;
39,000 telephones (0.7 per 100 popl.); 3 AM stations, no FM
station, and 1 TV station; 2 submarine cables; 1 Atlantic
Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,179,000; 609,000 fit
for military service; 48,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$45,117,408; about 7.2% of central government budget
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SEYCHELLES
SEYCHELLES :;.
Victoria
COMOROS
LAND
404 km0; 54% arable land, nearly all of it is under
cultivation, 17% wood and forest land, 29% other (mainly
reefs and other surfaces unsuited for agriculture); 40 granitic
and 43 coral islands
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 491 km (Mahe Island 93 km)
PEOPLE
Population: 62,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.1% (7-70 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Seychellois (sing. & pl.); adjective-
Seychelles
Ethnic divisions: Seychellois (admixture of Asians,
Africans, Europeans)
Religion: 90% Roman Catholic
Language: English official; Creole most widely spoken
Literacy: limited; 90% of school-age population is
attending school
Labor force: 15,000 in monetized sector (excluding self-
employed, domestic servants, and workers on small farms);
33% public sector employment, 20% private sector employ-
ment in agricuture, 20% private sector employment in
construction and catering services
Organized labor: 3 major trade unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Seychelles
Type: republic; member of the Commonwealth
Capital: Victoria, Mahe Island
Legal system: based on English common law, French civil
law system, and customary law
National holiday: 29 June
Branches: President, Council of Ministers
Government leader: President, France Albert Rene
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: April 1974, new government has promised
election by June 1979, but not before new constitution
drafted
Political parties and leaders: Rene, who heads the
Seychelles People's United Party, came to power by a
military coup in June 1977, until then he had been Prime
Minister in an uneasy coalition with then President James
Mancham, who headed the Seychelles Democratic Party.
Rene banned the Seychelles Democratic Party in mid-March
and plans to turn the country into a one-party state. Rene
dissolved the National Assembly, and plans to rule by
presidential decree until a new constitution is drafted. Rene
abrogated the constitution without qualification upon taking
power. Subsequently the government decided to retain some
provisions, but presidential decree enables the President and
specified subordinates to violate constitutional safeguards in
interests of state security
Communists: negligible
Other political or pressure groups: trade unions which
are appendages of political parties
Member of: G-77, NAM, OAU, U.N.
ECONOMY
GDP: $29 million (1974); $500 per capita; 4.6% growth
rate (1974)
Agriculture: islands depend largely on coconut production
and export of copra; cinnamon, vanilla, and patchouli (used
for perfumes) are other cash crops; food crops-small
quantities of sweet potatoes, cassava, sugarcane, and
bananas; islands not self-sufficient in foodstuffs and the bulk
of the supply must be imported; fish is an important food
source
Major industries: processing of coconut and vanilla,
fishing, small-scale manufacture of consumer goods, coir
rope factory, tea factory, tourism
Electric power: 11,000 kW capacity (1977); 25 million
kWh produced (1977), 410 kWh per capita
Exports: $6 million (f.o.b., 1975); cinnamon (bark and oil)
and vanilla account for almost 50% of the total, copra
accounts for about 40%, the remainder consisting of
patchouli, fish, and guano
Imports: $33 million (c.i.f., 1975); food, tobacco, and
beverages account for about 40% of imports, manufactured
goods about 25%, machinery and transport equipment,
petroleum products, textiles
Major trade partners: exports-India, U.S.; imports-
U.K., Kenya, South Africa, Burma, India, Australia
Aid: $32 million in aid during 1974-76 from U.K.; US
(FY53-76) $0.8 million
Budget: (1978) proposed revenues, $13 million; expendi-
tures $17 million
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Monetary conversion rate: 5.4 Seychelles rupees=US$l
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 215 km total; 145 km bituminous, 70 km
crushed stone or earth
Ports: 1 small port (Victoria)
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 4 total, 4 usable (on Praslin Island, Astove
Island, Bird Island, Mahe Island); with 1 permanent-surface
runway 2,440-3,659
Telecommunications: direct radiocommunication with
adjacent islands and African coastal countries; 3,900
telephones (6.4 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, no FM, and no TV
stations; Indian Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 14,000; 7,000 fit for
military service
Supply: infantry-type weapons and ammunition from
Tanzania
SIERRA LEONE
LAND
72,261 km2; 65% arable (6% of total land area under
cultivation), 27% pasture, 4% swampland, 4% forested
Land boundaries: 933 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 402 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,256,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.3% (12-74 to 7-76)
Nationality: noun-Sierra Leonean, adjective-Sierra
Leonean
Ethnic divisions: over 99% native African, rest European
and Asian; 13 tribes
Religion: 70% animist, 25% Muslim, 5% Christian
Language: English official, but regular use limited to
literate minority; principal vernaculars are Mende in south
and Temne in north; "Krio," the language of the resettled
ex-slave population of the Freetown area, is used as a lingua
franca
Literacy: about 10%
Labor force: about 1.5 million; most of population
engages in subsistence agriculture; only small minority, some
70,000, earn wages
Organized labor: 35% of wage earners
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Sierra Leone
Type: republic under presidential regime since April 1971
Capital: Freetown
Political subdivisions: 3 provinces; divided into 12
districts with 146 chiefdoms, where paramount chief and
council of elders constitute basic unit of government; plus
western area, which comprises Freetown and other coastal
areas of the former colony
Legal system: based on English law and customary laws
indigenous to local tribes; constitution adopted April 1971;
highest court of appeal is the Sierra Leone Court of Appeals;
has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: National Day, 19 April
Branches: executive authority exercised by President;
parliament consists of 100 authorized seats, 85 of which are
filled by elected representatives of constituencies and 12 by
Paramount Chiefs elected by fellow Paramount Chiefs in
each district; President authorized to appoint four members,
of which two, currently, are filled by the heads of the Army
and the Police independent judiciary
Government leader: Siaka Stevens, President, heads APC
government composed of members of his political party
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: the maximum life of an elected parliament is 5
years, but it may be dissolved earlier by the President;
parliamentary election held in May 1977; President is
elected by parliament for 5 year term; next presidential
election 1981
Political parties and leaders: All People's Congress
(APC), headed by Stevens; Sierra Leone People's Party
(SLPP) is the opposition party
Communists: no party, although there are a few
Communists and a slightly larger number of sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, AIOEC, Commonwealth, ECA,
ECOWAS, FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBA, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
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ECONOMY
GDP: $680 million (mid 1975), $240 per capita; growth
rate 1.8% (mid-1971 to mid-1975)
Agriculture: main crops-palm kernels, coffee, cocoa,
rice, yams, millet, ginger, cassava; much of cultivated land
devoted to subsistence farming; food crops insufficient for
domestic consumption
Fishing: catch 67,797 metric tons (1975); imports $2.7
million (1974)
Major industries: mining-diamonds, iron ore, bauxite,
rutile; manufacturing-beverages, textiles, cigarettes, con-
struction goods; 1 oil refinery
Electric power: 85,000 kW capacity (1977); 264 million
kWh produced (1977), 80 kWh per capita
Exports: $105 million (f.o.b., 1976); diamonds, iron ore,
palm kernels, cocoa, coffee
Imports: $124 million (f.o.b., 1976); machinery and
transportation equipment, manufactured goods, foodstuffs,
petroleum products
Major trade partners: U.K., EC, U.S., Japan, Communist
countries
Budget: (FY77 est.) current revenues $102 million, total
expenditures $145 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Leone=US$0.91 (November
1977)
Fiscal year: I July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: about 84 km narrow gage (1.067 m) privately
owned mineral line operated by the Sierra Leone Develop-
ment Company
Highways: 7,073 km total; 1,148 km bituminous, 507 km
laterite (some gravel), and 5,418 km improved earth
Inland waterways: 800 km; 600 km navigable year-round
Ports: 1 major (Freetown), 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 16 total, 16 usable; 6 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 5 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: telephone and telegraph are inade-
quate; 15,000 telephones (0.5 per 100 pop].); 2 AM stations,
no FM, and 1 TV station; 1 submarine cable
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 660,000; 317,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Military budget: for year ending 30 June 1978,
$11,379,310 (excluding procurement funds); 8.5% of central
government budget
SINGAPORE
LAND
583 km2; 31% built up area, roads, railroads, and airfields,
22% agricultural, 47% other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm
Coastline: 193 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,339,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.3% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Singaporean(s), adjective-Singapore
Ethnic divisions: 76.2% Chinese, 15% Malay, 7% Indians
and Pakistani, 1.8% other
Religion: majority of Chinese are Buddhists or atheists;
Malays nearly all Muslim; minorities include Christians,
Hindus, Sikhs, Taoists, Confucianists
Language: national language is Malay; Chinese, Malay,
Tamil, and English are official languages
Literacy: 70% (1970)
Labor force: 474,718; 0.5% agriculture, forestry, and
fishing, 0.4% mining and quarrying, 32.2% manufacturing,
30.4% services, 5.2% construction, 21.5% commerce, 9.8%
transport, storage, and communications
Organized labor: 24% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Singapore
Type: republic within Commonwealth since separation
from Malaysia in August 1965
Capital: Singapore
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
based on preindependence State of Singapore constitution;
legal education at University of Singapore; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 9 August
Branches: ceremonial President; executive power exer-
cised by Prime Minister and cabinet responsible to unitary
legislature
Government leaders: President, Dr. Benjamin Sheares;
Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew
Suffrage: universal over age 20; voting compulsory
182
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SINGAPORE/SOLOMON ISLANDS
Elections: normally every 5 years
Political parties and leaders: government-People's
Action Party (PAP), Lee Kuan Yew; opposition-Barisan
Sosialis Party (BSP), Dr. Lee Siew Choh; Workers' Party, J.
B. Jeyaretnam; Communist Party illegal
Voting strength (1976 election): PAP won all 69 seats in
Parliament and received 72.4% of vote; remaining 27.6% to
four opposition parties
Communists: 200-500; Barisan Sosialis Party infiltrated
by Communists
Member of: ADB, ANRPC, ASEAN, Colombo Plan, G-77,
GATT, IBRD, ICAO, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IPU,
ISO, ITU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $5.84 billion (1976), $2,560 per capita; 10.4%
average annual real growth (1966-77), 7.8% (1977)
Agriculture: occupies a position of minor importance in
the economy, self-sufficient in pork, poultry, and eggs, must
import much of its other food requirements; major crops-
rubber, copra, fruit and vegetables
Fishing: catch 17,560 metric tons (1975), imports-
137,700 metric tons (1975)
Major industries: petroleum refining, oil drilling equip-
ment, rubber processing and rubber products, processed
food and beverages, electronics, ship repair, entrepot trade,
financial services
Electric power: 1,390,000 kW capacity (1977); 5 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,500 kWh per capita
Exports: $8.2 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 40% reexports;
petroleum products, rubber, manufactured goods
Imports: $10.5 billion (c.i.f., 1977); 18% goods reexported;
major retained imports-capital equipment, manufactured
goods, petroleum
Major trade partners: exports-Malaysia, U.S., Japan,
U.K., Indonesia; imports-Japan, Malaysia, U.S., U.K.
Aid: Western (except U.S.) (1970-76), $172.8 million
committed; U.S. (1970-76), $1.9 million committed
Budget: (FY77/78) revenues $1.4 billion, expenditures
$2.2 billion, deficit $800 million; 15% military, 85% civilian
Monetary conversion rate: 2.32 Singapore dollars=US$1
(February 1978)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 38 km of meter gage
Highways: 2,200 km total (1976); 1,700 km paved, 500
km crushed stone or improved earth
Ports: 3 major
Civil air: approximately 23 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 5 total, 5 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: adequate domestic facilities; good
international service; good radio and television broadcast
coverage; 374,000 telephones (16.3 per 100 popl.); 13 AM, 4
FM, and 2 TV stations; SEACOM submarine cable extends
to Hong Kong via Sabah, Malaysia; 1 ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 643,000; 468,000 fit for
military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1978,
$413.2 million; about 18.5% of central government budget
SOLOMON ISLANDS
.;o .ISLHIVUZ-
00
0 0
Pacific
Ocean
LAND
About 29,785 km2
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 3 nm
Coastline: about 5,313 km
PEOPLE
Population: 212,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Solomon Islander(s); adjective-Solo-
mon Islander
Ethnic divisions: 93.0% Melanesians, 4.0% Polynesians,
1.5% Micronesians, 0.3% Chinese, 0.8% Europeans, 0.4%
others
Religion: almost all at least nominally Christian; Roman
Catholic, Anglican, and Methodist churches dominant
Literacy: 60%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Solomon Islands
Type: British protectorate administered as crown colony,
became self-governing January 1976, slated for indepen-
dence July 1978
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PAPUA
N,EW GUINEA''
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SOLOMON ISLANDS/SOMALIA
Capital: Honiara
Political subdivisions: 4 administrative districts
Legal system: a High Court Plus Magistrates Courts, also a
system of native courts throughout the islands
Branches: executive authority in High Commissioner; a
legislative assembly of 38 members
Government leaders: Governor Colin H. Allan, and Chief
Minister Kenilorea
Suffrage: universal age 21 and over
Elections: every 4 years, latest June 1976
Political parties and leaders: no real political parties,
groupings of independents
Member of: ADB
ECONOMY
GDP: $40 million (1973)
Agriculture: largely dominated by coconut production
with subsistence crops of yams, taro, bananas; self-sufficient
in rice
Electric power: 6,000 kW capacity (1977); 13 million
kWh produced (1977), 60 kWh per capita
Exports: $15.5 million (1975); 39% copra, 27% timber,
23% fish
Imports: $29.2 million (1975)
Major trade partners: exports-EEC excluding U.K. 42%,
Japan 29%; imports-Australia 34%, U.K. 14%, Japan 13%
(1975)
Budget: (1971) revenues $9.8 million, expenditures $9.9
million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Australian dollar=US$1.24
(July 1976)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroad: none
Highways: 834 km total; 241 km sealed or all-weather
Inland waterways: none
Ports: 5 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 22 total, 21 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway; 5 with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: 3 AM broadcast, no FM, and no
TV stations; 10,000 radio receivers, 1,726 telephones, no TV
sets; international connections with London, England, via
cable broadcasts
SOMALIA
LAND
637,140 km2; 13% arable (0.3% cultivated), 32% grazing,
14% scrub and forest, 41 % mainly desert, urban, or other
Land boundaries: 2,263 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm
Coastline: 3,025 km
PEOPLE
Population: 3,388,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.4% (current)
Nationality: noun-Somali(s); adjective-Somali
Ethnic divisions: 85% Hamitic, rest mainly Bantu; 30,000
Arabs, 3,000 Europeans, 800 Asians
Religion: almost entirely Muslim
Language: Somali (written form instituted by government
in 1976); Arabic, Italian, English
Literacy: under 5%
Labor force: 965,000 (1968 est.); very few are skilled
laborers; 70% pastoral nomads, 30% agriculturists, govern-
ment employees, traders, fishermen, handicraftsmen, other
Organized labor: General Federation of Somali Trade
Unions, a government-controlled organization, established in
1977
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Somali Democratic Republic
Type: republic
Capital: Mogadiscio
National holiday: 21 October
Political subdivisions: 16 regions, 60 districts
Organization: the Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party,
created on July 1, 1976, has become the new executive body
in the country; party has 74-man central committee and
5-man politburo headed by President Siad
Government leader: President and Prime Minister, Gen.
Mohamed Siad Barre
Communists: possibly some Communist sympathizers in
the government hierarchy
Member of: AFDB, ARAB LEAGUE, EAMA, FAO, G-
77, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
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SOMALIA/SOUTH AFRICA
ECONOMY
GDP: $340 million (1975 est.), $110 per capita
Agriculture: mainly a pastoral country, raising livestock;
crops-bananas, sugarcane, cotton, cereals
Major industries: a few small industries, including a sugar
refinery, tuna and beef canneries, textiles, iron rod plant,
and petroleum refining
Electric power: 18,000 kW capacity (1977); 45 million
kWh produced (1977), 10 kWh per capita
Exports: $85 million (f.o.b., 1976); livestock, hides, skins,
bananas
Imports: $176 million (c.i.f., 1976); textiles, cereals,
transport equipment, machinery, construction materials and
equipment, petroleum products; also military materiel in
1977
Major trade partners: Arab countries and Italy; $21.4
million imports from Communist countries (1975 est.)
Monetary conversion rate: 6.295 Somali shillings=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 January-31 December
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 13,541 km total; 936 km paved, 770 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil, 11,835 km improved
or unimproved earth (est.)
Ports: 3 major (Mogadiscio, Berbera, Chisimaio)
Civil air: 6 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 55 total, 49 usable; 6 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m; 3 with runways
2,440-3,659 m; 16 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: telephone poor, telegraph fair;
6,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 2 AM, no FM, 1 TV
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 786,000; 435,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, 34,650,357; 17.3% of central government budget
SOUTH AFRICA
NOTE: separate data on Transkei follows last entry for
South Africa
LAND
1,222,480 km2 (includes enclave of Walvis Bay, 1,124 km2;
and Transkei, 44,000 km2); 12% cultivable, 2% forested, 86%
desert, waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 2,044 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 2,881 km, including Transkei
PEOPLE
Population: 27,432,000, including Bophuthatswana and
Transkei (July 1978), average annual growth rate 2.5% (7-75
to 7-76); Bophuthatswana 1,110,000 (July 1978), average
annual growth rate 2.2% (current); Transkei 2,190,000 (July
1978), average annual growth rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-South African(s); adjective-South
African
Ethnic divisions: 17.8% white, 69.9% African, 9.4%
Colored, 2.9% Asian
Religion: most whites and coloreds and roughly 60% of
Africans are Christian; roughly 60% of Asians are Hindu,
20% are Muslim
Language: Afrikaans and English official, Africans have
many vernacular languages
Literacy: almost all white population literate; government
estimates 50% of Africans literate
Labor force: 8.7 million (total of economically active,
1970); 53% agriculture, 8% manufacturing, 7% mining, 5%
commerce, 27% miscellaneous services
Organized labor: about 7% of total labor force is
unionized (mostly white workers); relatively small African
unions have no bargaining power
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of South Africa
Type: republic
Capital: administrative, Pretoria; legislative, Cape Town;
judicial, Bloemfontein
Political subdivisions: 4 provinces, each headed by
centrally appointed administrator; provincial councils, elect-
ed by white electorate, retain limited powers
Legal system: based on Roman-Dutch law and English
common law; constitution enacted 1961, changing the Union
of South Africa into a Republic; possibility of judicial review
of Acts of Parliament concerning dual official languages;
accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Republic Day, 31 May
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Branches: President as formal chief of state; Prime
Minister as head of government; Cabinet responsible to
bicameral legislature; lower house elected directly by white
electorate; upper house indirectly elected and appointed;
judiciary maintains substantial independence of government
influence
Government leader: Prime Minister Balthazar Johannes
Vorster
Suffrage: general suffrage limited to whites over 18 (17 in
Natal Province)
Elections: must be held at
elections 30 November 1977
least every 5 years; last
Political parties and leaders: National Party, B. J.
Vorster, P. W. Botha, C. Mulder, R. F. Botha; Progessive
Federal Party, Colin Eglin, Ray Swart, Helen Suzman; New
Republic Party, Radclyffe Cadman; South Africa Party,
Myburgh Streicher; Herstigte Nasionale Party, J. Marais
Voting strength: (1977 general elections) Parliamentary
seats: 134 National Party, 17 Progressive Federal Party, 10
New Republic Party, 3 South Africa Party
Communists: small Communist Party illegal since 1950;
party in exile maintains headquarters in London; Dr. Yasuf
Dadoo, Moses Kotane, Joe Slovo
Other political groups: (insurgent groups in exile) African
National Congress (ANC), Oliver Tambo; Pan-Africanist
Congress (PAC), leadership in dispute
Member of: GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMF, ISO, ITU,
IWC-International Whaling Commission, IWC-Interna-
tional Wheat Council, U.N., UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO,
WSG
ECONOMY
GDP: $38.9 billion (1977), about $1,431 per capita; real
growth rate 0.5% (1977)
Agriculture: main crops-corn, wool, wheat, sugarcane,
tobacco, citrus fruits; dairy products; self-sufficient
foodstuffs
Fishing: catch 1.3 million metric tons (1975)
Major industries: mining, automobile assembly, metal-
working, machinery, textiles, iron and steel, chemical,
fertilizer, fishing
Electric power: 15,272,800 kW capacity (1977); 87 billion
kWh produced (1977), 3,205 kWh per capita
Exports: $7.3 billion (f.o.b., 1977, excluding gold); wool,
diamonds, corn, uranium, sugar, fruit, hides, skins, metals,
metallic ores, asbestos, fish products; gold output $2.7 billion
(1976)
Imports: $8.7 billion (c.i.f., 1977); motor vehicles,
machinery, metals, petroleum products, textiles, chemicals
Major trade partners: U.K. and other Commonwealth
nations, U.S., West Germany, Japan
Aid: no military or economic aid
Budget: FY79-revenue $8.8 billion, expenditures $11.3
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 SA Rand=US$1.15 as
October 1977, 0.87 SA Rand=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 25,560 km total; 24,854 km 1.067-meter gage
of which 5,292 km are multiple track; over 5,000 km
electrified; 706 km 0.160-meter gage single track
Highways: 209,244 km total; 57,368 km paved, 148,786
km crushed stone, gravel, or improved earth; 3,090 km
unimproved earth
Pipelines: 836 km
322 km natural gas
Ports: 8 major
crude oil; 1,048 km refined products;
Civil air: 80 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 657 total, 520 usable; 66 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 3 with runways over 3,660 m, 6 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 126 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: the system is the best developed,
most modern, and highest capacity in Africa and consists of
carrier-equipped open-wire lines, coaxial cables, radio-relay
links, and radiocommunication stations; key centers are
Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg, Port
Elizabeth, and Pretoria; 2.2 million telephones (8.3 per 100
popl.); 13 AM, 84 FM, and 34 TV stations; 1 submarine
cable; I satellite station with Atlantic Ocean and Indian
Ocean antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 6,006,000; 3,666,000 fit
for military service; obligation for service in Citizen Force or
Commandos begins at 18; volunteers for service in
permanent force must be 17; national service obligation is
two years
Military budget: for year ending 31 March 1979, $2.0
billion; 18% of central government budget
Transkei
NOTE: Formerly an autonomous tribal homeland in
South Africa, Transkei was granted independence by South
Africa on 26 October 1976, but has not been recognized by
any other government or any international organization. It
remains heavily dependent on South Africa for administra-
tive and economic support.
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July 1978
SOUTH AFRICA/SPAIN
Transkei People's Freedom Party, 2 Democratic Party, 2
LAND
44,000 km2 in one large and two small pieces separated New
Communists: no Party Party
from each other by parts of South Africa
Land boundaries: 1,200 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 250 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,190,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Transkeian(s); adjective-Transkeian
Ethnic divisions: 98.9% African, 0.6% white, 0.5%
colored (mulatto); Africans belong to Xhosa ethnic group
Religion: whites and coloreds predominantly Christian;
t or Christian
ECONOMY
GDP: estimated at $150 million, $86 per capita
Agriculture: cash crops-tea, phormium tenax, small
amount of coffee; food crops-corn, sorghum, dry beans;
imports over half its foodstuffs from South Africa; two-thirds
of Transkei devoted to grazing-1.2 million cattle, 2.5
million sheep, 1.3 million goats
Major industries: forestry, textiles, tourism
Exports: timber, labor to South Africa, tea, sacks
Imports: foodstuffs, machines, equipment
Major trade partners: South Africa
Aid: South Africa, almost $500 million since
Budget: $156 million (1976-77), about 70% of
provided by the South African government
conversion
1970
which is
rate: 1 South African Rand=
Africans either animas Monetary
Language: whites, coloreds, and educated minority of US$1.5
lish; bulk of Africans speak
En
g
Africans speak Afrikaans or
Fiscal year:
Xhosa
Literacy: high for whites and coloreds; low for Africans
Labor force: roughly 400,000 of whom only 50,000 are
regularly employed in Transkei; bulk are migrant workers in
South Africa
Organized labor: no trade union, although some Trans-
keians employed in South Africa belong to South African
unions
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Transkei
Type: republic
Capital: Umtata
Political subdivisions: 28 administrative districts
Legal system: based on English common law and African
customary law; decisions of Transkei Supreme Court can be
appealed to South African Supreme Court
Branches: President is formal chief of state; Prime
Minister is head of government; Cabinet responsible to
National Assembly, which has 75 seats for hereditary tribal
chiefs and 75 seats for popularly elected members
Government leader: Prime Minister Kaiser Matanzima
Suffrage: Transkeian citizens over 21 years of age
Elections: must be held at least every 5 years; last general
election October 1976
Political parties and leaders: Transkei National Inde-
pendence Party, Chief Kaiser Matanzima; Transkei People's
Freedom Party, Cromwell Diko; Democratic Party, Hector
Ncokazi; New Democratic Party, Knowledge Guzana
Voting strength: (1976 general election) National Assem-
bly seats; 142 Transkei National Independence Party, 4
1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: less than 160 km
Highways: 725 km paved, 7,768 km unpaved
Ports: none; Transkei dependent on the South African
port of East London
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 215,000
Personnel: 254 army (including 7 officers)
Major ground units: 1 infantry battalion
SPAIN
LAND
505,050 km2, including Canary (7,511 km2) and Balearic
Islands (5,025 km2); 41% arable and land under permanent
crops, 27% meadow and pasture, 22% forest, 10% urban or
other
Land boundaries: 1,899 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 4,964 km (includes Balearic Islands, 677 km,
and Canary Islands, 1,158 km)
PEOPLE
Population: 36,734,000, including the Balearic and
Canary Islands; also including Alhucemas, Ceuta, Chafar-
inas, Melilla, and Penon de Velez de la Gomera (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 1.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Spaniard(s); adjective-Spanish
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Ethnic divisions: homogeneous composite of Mediterra-
nean and Nordic types
Religion: 99% Roman Catholic, 1% other sects
Language: Castilian Spanish spoken by great majority;
but 17% speak Catalan, 7% Galician, and 2% Basque
Literacy: about 97%
Labor force (1975): 13.3 million; 22% agriculture, 38%
industry, 40% services; unemployment now estimated at 8%
of labor force
Organized labor: labor unions legalized April 1977
experiencing surge in membership; probably represent about
20% of the labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Spanish State
Type: a monarchy in the process of replacing the
authoritarian regime of the late Generalissimo Franco with a
modified Western-style parliamentary system; Juan Carlos
proclaimed King, on November 22, 1975
Capital: Madrid
Political subdivisions: metropolitan Spain, including the
Canaries and Balearics, divided into 50 provinces with
governors appointed by the central government; also 5 places
of sovereignty (presidios) on the Mediterranean coast of
Morocco; transferred administration of Spanish Sahara to
Morocco and Mauritania on February 26, 1976
Legal system: civil law system, with regional applications
of customary law; the 7 basic laws of the Franco era
constitution were greatly modified by the constitutional law
for political reform of December 1976 providing for a
freely-elected parliament to draw up a new constitution;
judges decide cases, no jury system; does not accept
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 12 October
Branches: executive, with King's acts subject to counter-
signature, Prime Minister appointed for 5-year term by the
King from 3 names submitted by King's advisory Council of
the Realm, may be removed by the King with consent of the
Council; not legally responsible to the parliament; legislative
with new bicameral Cortes elected on June 15, 1977 likely to
adjust the executive-legislative relationship through its
consituent power; the more powerful Chamber has 350
members chosen by proportional representation, and the
Senate has 248 members (207 directly elected and 41
appointed by the King); judicial, independent in principle
but generally limited to interpretation of laws
Government leaders: King Juan Carlos I-Chief of State,
and Commander in Chief of the armed forces; and Prime
Minister Adolfo Suarez Gonzalez
Suffrage: universal in national referendums, over age 21
and in parliamentary elections, beginning in June 1977
Elections: free parliamentary elections in June 1977 for 4-
year term; postponed local elections likely to be delayed
until fall 1978 or early 1979
Political parties and leaders: Under the revised law on
political parties of February 1977 over 150 parties were
legalized by the time of the parliamentary election in June
and others have been approved after the election. Most of
the prominent semiclandestine parties of the Franco era
have been legalized, including the Spanish Communist Party
(PCE). Franco's National Movement was dissolved in April.
In view of the multiplicity of parties, a number of
electoral coalitions were formed. The principal national
coalitions and parties from right to left are: the Popular
Alliance (AP)-the conservative coalition led by ex-minister
Fraga and including 6 other former ministers under Franco,
the major rightist group-made a poor showing in the
parliamentary election. The Union of the Democratic
Center (UCD)-a centrist coalition of 15 reform-minded
parties backing Prime Minister Suarez-includes ex-minis-
ters Calvo-Sotelo and Cabanillas, Social Democrat Fernan-
dez-Ordonez, Liberal Democrat Garrigues Walker, and
Christian Democrat Alvarez de Miranda. Suarez formally
forged the coalition into a single party on 4 August 1977 but
continues to have problems getting the disparate groups to
pull together. The Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE),
led by Felipe Gonzalez, is the major party of the democratic
left. A much smaller contender, the Popular Socialist Party
of Enrique Tierno Galvan merged with the PSOE in May
1978. The Spanish Communist Party (PCE), led by Santiago
Carrillo, and its several regional branches espouse Eurocom-
munism. There are also several Basque and Catalan regional
parties of mixed orientation which are united by their goal
of greater regional autonomy.
Voting strength: (1977 parliamentary election) UCD
polled 34% of votes and received 165 chamber seats (47.1%),
11 seats short of a majority; the PSOE polled 28.5% and
received 118 seats (34%); the PCE polled 9.2% and received
20 seats (5.7%); the AP polled 8.2% and received 16 seats; the
PSP polled 4.3% and received 6 seats; the various Basque
and Catalan regional parties received 20 seats.
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SPAIN/SRI LANKA
Communists: PCE claims to have 200,000 members, but
this figure is difficult to verify; the PCE's greatest strength is
in labor where it dominates the country's strongest trade
union, the Workers Commissions, which has a membership
estimated around 1 million.
Other political or pressure groups: on the extreme left,
the illegal Basque Fatherland and Liberty (ETA) and the
Anti-Fascist and Patriotic Revolutionary Front (FRAP) use
terrorism to oppose the government; on the extreme right,
the Guerrillas of Christ the King carry out vigilante attacks
on ETA members and other leftists; free labor unions
(authorized in April 1977) include the Communist-domi-
nated Workers Commissions; the Socialist General Union of
Workers (UGT), and the independent Workers Syndical
Union (USO); the Catholic Church; business and land
owning interests; Opus Dei; Catholic Action; university
students
Member of: ASSIMER, ESRO, FAO, GATT, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF,
IOOC, IPU, ITC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
OAS (observer), OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WSG; applied for full membership in the EC
28 July 1977; invited to join Council of Europe 18 October
1977
ECONOMY
GNP: $104.2 billion (1976), $2,896 per capita; 69.9%
private consumption, 10.3% public consu 4 Son,fo .1% gross
bal-
fixed investment, 1.5% stockbuilding;
ance (1976); real growth rate 1.8% (1976); typical growth
rate 6.5%
Agriculture: main crops-cereals, oranges, grapes for
wine, potatoes, olives, sugar beets; virtually self-sufficient in
good crop years; caloric intake, 2,750 calories per day per
capita (1969-70)
Fishing: landed 1.52 million metric tons valued at $1,152
million in 1976
Major industries: food processing, textiles and apparel
(including footwear), metal manufacturing, chemicals, ship-
building, automobiles
Shortages: crude petroleum
Crude steel: 10.9 million metric tons produced (1976),
300 kg per capita
Electric power: 29,100,000 kW capacity (1977); 92.9
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,545 kWh per capita
Exports: $10,208 million (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
iron and steel products, textiles,
d other fruits
,
oranges an
wines, mercury, ships, canned fruits, vegetables, and
footwear
Major trade partners: (1976) 32.1% EC, 10.5% U.S. and
Canada, 16.7% rest of OECD, 81% Latin America, 2.9%
CEMA
Aid: economic authorizations-U.S., $1,236 million autho-
rized (FY70-76); other Western bilateral (ODA and OOF),
$448 million (1970-76); military authorizations-U.S., $238
million (FY70-76)
Budget: (1977 central government)-budgeted revenues
$12,726 billion, budgeted expenditures $12,726 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 peseta=US$0.0132 (1977
average)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 15,975 km total; Spanish National Railways
(RENFE) operates 13,509 km 1.668-meter gage, 4,328 km
electrified and 2,162 km double track; FEVE (government-
owned narrow gage railways) operates 1,676 km, of
predominantly meter gage (1.000 m) and 310 km electrified;
eter a (1.0 m), 245 km operate
electrified and 56 km double
meter gage ge (1.000 0 m),
track
Highways: 139,350 km total; 78,585 national-6,810 km
bituminous, concrete, stone block; 56,650 bituminous treated;
15,125 km crushed stone; the remaining 60,765 km are
classified as provincial or local roads
Inland waterways: 1,045 km; of minor importance as
transport arteries and contribute little to economy
Pipelines: 386 km crude oil; 1,030 km refined products;
98 km natural gas
Ports: 23 major, 150 minor
Civil air: 178 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
in)
Airfields (including Balearic and Canary Islands): 94
total, 86 usable; 51 with permanent-surface runways; 4 with
runways over 3,660 m, 19 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 34
with runways 1,220-2,439 m; 4 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: generally adequate, modern facili-
ties; 8.6 million telephones (23.9 per 100 popl.); 180 AM, 250
FM, and 791 TV stations; 14 coaxial submarine cables; 4
communication satellite ground stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 8,799,000; 6,768,000 fit
for military service; 301,000 reach military age (20) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1979, $4,117.9 million; about 22% of the proposed central
government budget
Imports: $17,779 million (c.i.f., 1977); principal items- LAND
uipment petroleum and 65,500 km2;
e
t
SRI LANKA
(formerly Ceylon)
25% cultivated; 44% forested; 31% waste,
q
ion
machinery and transporta
petroleum products, grains, cotton, iron and steel urban, and other
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 200
nm, plus pearling in the Gulf of Mannar); 200 nm exclusive
economic zone
Coastline: 1,340 km
PEOPLE
Population: 14,283,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 1.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Sri Lankan(s); adjective-Sri Lankan
Ethnic divisions: 71% Sinhalese, 21% Tamil, 6% Moor,
2% other
Religion: 64% Buddhist, 20% Hindu, 9% Christian, 6%
Muslim, 1% other
Language: Sinhala official, spoken by about 70% of
population; Tamil spoken by about 22%; English commonly
used in government and spoken by about 10% of the
population
Literacy: 82% (1970 est.)
Labor force: 4 million; 17% unemployed; employed
persons-53.4% agriculture, 14.8% mining and manufactur-
ing, 12.4% trade and transport, 19.4% services and other;
extensive underemployment
Organized labor: 43% of labor force, over 50% of which
employed on tea, rubber, and coconut estates
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Sri Lanka
Type: independent state since 1948
Capital: Colombo
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces, 22 administrative
districts, and four categories of semiautonomous elected
local governments
Legal system: a highly complex mixture of English
common law, Roman-Dutch, Muslim and customary law;
new constitution 22 May 1972; no judicial review of
legislative acts; legal education at Sri Lanka Law College
and University of Sri Lanka, Peradeniya; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 22 May
Branches: A constitutional amendment promulgated on I
January 1978 established a strong presidential form of
government under J. R. Jayewardene, who became Prime
Minister following his party's election victory in July 1977.
Jayewardene will remain president until 1983, regardless of
whether parliament is dissolved and subsequent parliamen-
tary elections are held. When his term in office expires, a
new president will be chosen by a direct national election for
a six year term.
Government leader: President J. R. Jayewardene
Suffrage: universal over age 18, but most Indian Tamils,
who comprise 10.6% of population, are not enfranchised
Elections: national elections, ordinarily held every 6
years; must be held more frequently if government loses
confidence vote; last election held July 1977
Political parties and leaders: Sri Lanka Freedom Party,
Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike, President; Lanka
Sama Samaja Party (Trotskyite), N. M. Perera, President;
Tamil United Liberation Front, A. Amirthalingam leader;
United National Party, J. R. Jayewardene; Communist
Party/Moscow, Pieter Keuneman, General Secretary; Com-
munist Party/Peking, N. Shanmugathasan, General Secre-
tary; Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (People's United Front),
M. B. Ratnayaka, President
Voting strength (1977 election): 30% Sri Lanka Freedom
Party, 51 % United National Party, 3.9% Lanka Sama Samaja
Party, 1.8% Communist Party/Moscow, 6.5% TULF minor
parties and independents accounted for remainder
Communists: approximately 107,000 voted for the
Communist Party in the July 1977 general election;
Communist Party/Moscow approximately 5,000 members
(1975), Communist Party/Peking 1,000 members (1970 est.)
Other political or pressure groups: Buddhist clergy,
Sinhalese Buddhist lay groups; far-left violent revolutionary
groups; labor unions
Member of: ADB, ANRPC, Colombo Plan, Common-
wealth, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO,
IMCO, IMF, IPU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $3.1 billion in 1976 (1976 Prices), $200 per capita;
real growth rate 4.4% (1977), 3.0% (1976)
Agriculture: agriculture accounts for about 37% of GNP;
main crops-rice, rubber, tea, coconuts; 60% self-sufficient
in food; food shortages-rice, wheat, sugar
Fishing: catch 136,844 metric tons (1976)
Major industries: Processing of rubber, tea, and other
agricultural commodities; consumer goods manufacture
Electric power: 430,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.4 billion
kWh produced (1977), 100 kWh per capita
Exports: $781 million (1977); tea, rubber, coconut
products
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Imports: $768 million (1977); food, petroleum, fertilizer
Major trade partners: (1976) exports-10.0% China, 9.7%
U.K.; imports-12.7% Saudi Arabia, 10.6% Iran
Budget: 1977 est. revenue $607 million, expenditure $829
million
Monetary conversion rate: 16 rupees=US$l (November
1977)
Fiscal year: 1 January-31 December (starting 1973)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,535 km total; 1,395 km 1.676-meter gage,
140 km 0.762-meter gage; 102 km double track; no
electrification; government owned
Highways: 52,200 km total (1975); 24,300 km paved
(mostly bituminous treated), 18,800 km crushed stone or
gravel, 9,400 km improved earth or unimproved earth; in
addition several thousand km of tracks, mostly unmotorable
Inland waterways: 430 km; navigable by shallow-draft
craft
Ports: 3 major, 9 minor
Civil air: 8 major transport (including 1 leased)
Airfields: 14 total, 12 usable; 12 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 7 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: good international service; 75,000
(est.) telephones (0.5 per 100 popl.); 530,000 radio sets, 500
TV sets; 14 AM stations, 2 FM stations, and 1 TV station;
submarine cables extend to India; 1 ground satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,477,000; 2,619,000 fit
for military service; 158,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $24.7 million, 2% of central government budget
SUDAN
LAND
2,504,530 km2; 37% arable (3% cultivated), 15% grazing,
33% desert, waste, or urban, 15% forest
Land boundaries: 7,805 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
Coastline: 853 km
PEOPLE
Population: 17,624,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Sudanese (sing. and pl.); adjective-
Sudanese
Ethnic divisions: 39% Arab, 6% Bela, 52% Negro, 2%
foreigners, 1% other
Religion: 73% Sunni Muslims in north, 23% pagan, 4%
Christian (mostly in south)
Language: Arabic, Nubian, Ta Bedawie, diverse dialects
of Nilotic, Nilo-Hamitic, and Sudanic languages, English;
program of Arabization in process
Literacy: 5% to 10%
Labor force: 5.8 million; 85% agriculture, 15% industry,
commerce, services, etc.; labor shortages exist for almost all
categories of employment
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Democratic Republic of the Sudan
Type: republic under military control since coup in May
1969
Capital: Khartoum
Political subdivisions: 18 provinces, provincial and local
administrations controlled by central government; limited
regional autonomy in 6 southern provinces
Legal system: based on English common law and Islamic
law; some separate religious courts; permanent constitution
promulgated April 1973; legal education at University of
Khartoum and Khartoum extension of Cairo University at
Khartoum; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with
reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 January
Government leader: President Ja'far al-Numayri
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: elections for National People's Assembly and
Southern Regional People's Assembly held in February 1978;
most recent Presidential election held April 1977 with
Numayri as sole candidate
Political parties and leaders: all parliamentary political
parties outlawed since May 1969; the ban on the Sudan
Communist Party was not enforced until after abortive coup
in July 1971; the government's mass political organization,
the Sudan Socialist Union, was formed in January 1972
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Communists: party decimated following July 1971 coup
and counter-coup, several top leaders executed; actual
hard-core membership down to lowest point in years; party
control over labor unions, professional groups and university
student groups ended; Communists purged from govern-
ment; party is being reorganized underground under
leadership of Secretary-General Muhammad Nujud, 3,500
CP members
Other political or pressure groups: Muslim Brotherhood;
Ansar Muslim sect, at odds with the military regime since
the May coup, are being reintegrated into national political
life; members of opposition National Front, composed of
former political party elements and other disgruntled
conservative interests, agreed to disband and join national
reconciliation efforts in April 1978
Member of: AFDB, APC, Arab League, FAO, G-77,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UP!J, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $3.9 billion at current prices (1976), $265 per capita
at current prices; 4%-5% growth rate (1977)
Agriculture: main crops-sorghum, millet, wheat, sesame,
peanuts, beans, barley; not self-sufficient in food production;
main cash crops-cotton, gum arabic, peanuts, sesame
Major industries: cotton ginning, textiles, brewery,
cement, edible oils, soap, distilling, shoes, pharmaceuticals
Electric power: 231,800 kW capacity (1977); 672 million
kWh produced (1977), 40 kWh per capita
Exports: $554 million (f.o.b., 1976); cotton (51%), gum
arabic, peanuts, sesame; $57.5 million exports to Communist
countries (FY76)
Imports: $979 million (c.i.f., 1976); textiles, petroleum
products, vehicles, tea, wheat; $75 million imports from
Communist countries (FY76)
Major trade partners: U.K., West Germany, Italy, India,
Ch
ina, France, Japan
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Sudanese
(official); 0.348 Sudanese pound=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 5,470 km total; 4,754 km 1.067-meter gage,
716 k
m 1.6096-meter gage plantation line
Highways: 10,550 km total; 600 km bituminous-treated,
800 km crushed stone or gravel, and 9,150 km improved and
unimproved earth roads; in addition, there are an undeter-
mined number of tracks
Inland waterways: 5,310 km navigable
Pipelines: refined products, 800 km
Ports: 1 major (Port Sudan)
Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 80 total, 75 usable; 8 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 31 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: large system by African standards,
but barely adequate; consists of radio relay, cables,
radiocommunications, and troposcatter; domestic satellite
system with 14 stations under construction; centers are
Khartoum, Al Fashir, Port Sudan; 56,000 telephones (0.3 per
100 pop].); 2 AM, no FM, and 2 TV stations; 1 submarine
cable; I Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 4,189,000; 2,567,000 fit
for military service; average number reaching military age
(18) annually, 201,000
Military budget: for fiscal year ending
$237,000,000; 11% of central government
SURINAM
30 June 1978,
budget
LAND
142,709 km2; negligible amount of arable land, meadows
and pastures, 76% forest, 8% unused but potentially
productive, 16% built-on area, wasteland, and other
Land boundaries: 1,561 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing
nm)
Coastline: 386 km
PEOPLE
Population: 385,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.5% (1-63 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Surinamer(s); adjective-Surinamese
Ethnic divisions: 31% Creole (Negro and mixed), 37%
Hindustani (East Indian), 15.3% Javanese, 10.3% Bush
Negro, 2.6% Amerindian, 1.7% Chinese, 1.0% Europeans,
1.7% other and unknown
Religion: Hindu, Muslim, Roman Catholic, Moravian,
other
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Language: Dutch official; English widely spoken; Sranan
Tongo (Surinamese, sometimes called Taki-Taki) is native
language of Creoles and much of the younger population,
and is lingua franca among others; Hindi; Javanese
Literacy: 80%
Labor force: 118,000
Organized labor: approx. 33% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Surinam
Type: Parliamentary Democracy
Capital: Paramaribo
Political subdivisions: 9 districts, each headed by District
Commissioner responsible to Minister of District government
and Decentralization except for Paramaribo, whose commis-
sioner is responsible to Minister of Home Affairs
Legal system: Dutch civil law system; constitution
adopted November 1975
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 November
Branches: President (Chief of State) elected by Parlia-
ment for five-year term; Council of Ministers headed by a
Prime Minister constitutes the Cabinet; 39-member Parlia-
ment popularly elected for 4-year term; court system
administered by Attorney-General under Minister of Justice
and Police
Government leaders: President, Johan H. E. Ferrier;
Prime Minister, Henck A. E. Arron
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: every 4 years or earlier upon request of Prime
Minister; latest held October 1977 won by National Party
Combination (NPK), a creole-based election coalition in
which the National Party of Surinam (NPS) is the largest
party
Political parties and leaders: National Party of Surinam
(NPS), Henck A. E. Arron; Nationalist Republic Party
(PNR), Edward Bruma (principal leftist party); Progressive
Reform Party (VHP), J. Lachmon; Pendawa Lima, S.
Somohardjo; Javanese Farmers' Party (KTPI), Willy Soe-
mita; Progressive Surinam People's Party (PSV), Emile
Wiintuin; Reformed Progressive Party (HPP), Pannalal
Parmessar
Voting strength (1977): NPK 22 seats, Opposition United
Democratic Parties Combination (VDP) 17 seats
Communists: (all small groups) Democratic Peoples
Front, Communist Party of Surinam (KPS)
Member of: EC (associate), ECLA, IBA, ILO, ITU, OAS,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $503 million (1976 est.); $1,140 per capita; real
growth rate 1976, 0.3%
Agriculture: main crops-rice, sugarcane, bananas; self-
sufficient in major staple (rice); caloric intake 2,350 calories
per day per capita (1968)
Major industries: bauxite mining, alumina and aluminum
production, lumbering, food processing
Electric power: 189,000 kW capacity (1977); 1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 2,330 kWh per capita
Exports: $151 million (f.o.b., 1976 est.); bauxite, alumina,
aluminum, wood and wood products, rice
Imports: $120 million (c.i.f., 1976 est.); capital equip-
ment, petroleum, iron and steel, cotton, flour, meat, dairy
products
Major trade partners: exports-35% U.S., 34% EC, 18%
other European countries; imports-34% U.S., 38% EC, 13%
Caribbean countries, 18% Europe (1975)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY54-76), $1.0
million in loans, $4.8 million in grants; from Netherlands,
EC, UNDP (1964-74), $180 million; planned from Nether-
lands (1976-85), $1.5 billion
Budget: revenue, $352 million; expenditure, $367 million
(1978 est.)
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Surinam guilder (S.
fl.)=US$0.565 (September 1976)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 166 km total; 86 km meter gage (1.00 m)
(government-owned) and 80 km narrow gage (industrial
lines); all single track
Highways: 2,500 km total; 500 km paved, 200 km gravel,
600 km improved earth, 1,200 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 4,500 km; most important means of
transport; oceangoing vessels with drafts ranging from 4.2 m
to 7 m can navigate many of the principal waterways while
native canoes navigate upper reaches
Ports: 1 major (Paramaribo), 6 minor
Civil air: 1 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 30 total, 29 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: international facilities good; do-
mestic radio-relay system; 18,600 telephones (4.9 per 100
popl.); 6 AM, 1 FM, and 1 TV station with 4 relay
transmitters
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 102,000; 60,000 fit for
military service
SWAZILAND
LAND
17,364 km2; most of area suitable for crops or pastureland
Land boundaries: 435 km
PEOPLE
Population: 526,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.8% (5-66 to 8-76)
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Nationality: noun-Swazi(s); adjective-Swazi
Ethnic divisions: 96% African, 3% European, I% mulatto
Religion: 43% animist, 57% Christian
Language: English and siSwati are official
government business conducted in English
Literacy: about 25%
Labor force: 120,000; about 60,000 engaged in subsistence
agriculture; 55,000-60,000 wage earners, many only inter-
mittently, with 31% agriculture, 11% government, 11%
manufacturing, 12% mining and forestry, 35% other (1968
est.); 22,000 employed in South African mines (1976)
Organized labor: about 15% of wage earners are
unionized
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Swaziland
Type: monarchy, under King Sobhuza II; independent
member of Commonwealth since September 1968
Capital: Mbabane (administrative)
Political subdivisions: 4 administrative districts
Legal system: based on South African Roman-Dutch law
in statutory courts, Swazi traditional law and custom in
traditional courts; legal education at University of Botswana
and Swaziland; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 6 September
Branches: in April 1973 King abolished the constitution,
dismissed parliament, and assumed personal rule; he has
ruled under a King-in-Council arrangement with the cabinet
being retained as an advisory council; a constitutional
commission submitted recommendations in June 1975, but
King has not authorized further action toward a new
constitution
Government leaders: Head of State King Sobhuza II;
Prime Minister Maphevu Dlamini
Suffrage: universal for adults
Elections: first elections for Legislative Council held in
June 1964; latest for House of Assembly in May 1972
Political parties and leaders: Imbokodvo, the traditional-
ist party, controlled by King Sobhuza II; the opposition
Ngwane National Liberatory Congress (NNLC), led by Dr.
Ambrose Zwane, has been dissolved
Voting strength: in 1972 elections, Imbokodvo won 21
seats, NNLC won 3 seats in the House of Assembly
Communists: no Communist Party
Member of: AFDB, FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto), IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU, NAM, OAU, U.N.,
UPU, WHO
ECONOMY
GDP: approximately $224 million (FY74), about $470 per
capita; growth rate in current prices as much as 11%
(FY71-74)
Agriculture: main crops-maize, cotton, rice, sugar, and
citrus fruits
Major industry: mining
Electric power: 75,000 kW capacity (1977); 130 million
kWh produced (1977), 250 kWh per capita
Exports: $191 million (f.o.b., 1976); sugar, iron ore,
asbestos, wood and forest products, citrus, meat products,
cotton
Imports: $200 million (f.o.b., 1976); motor vehicles,
petroleum products, foodstuffs, and clothing
Major trade partners: South Africa, U.K., U.S.
Aid: economic-U.K. $14.7 million (budgeted, 1971-73),
U.S. $10.9 million (FY61-76), others approximately $1.3
million; no military aid
Budget: FY77-revenue $86 million, recurrent expendi-
ture $47 million, development expenditure $39 million
Monetary conversion rate: I Lilangeni=US$1.15 (as of
March 1978)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 222 km 1.067-meter gage, single track
Highways: 2,653 km total; 224 km paved, 1,114 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil, and 1,315 km
improved earth
Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 31 total, 23 usable; 1 with runway
2,439 in
Telecommunications: system consists of a few
wire lines and low-powered radiocommunication stations;
Mbabane is the center; 8,200 telephones (1.6 per 100 popl.);
I AM, 2 FM, no TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 117,000; 69,000 fit for
military service
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LAND
448,070 kml; 8% arable, 1% meadows and pastures, 55%
forested, 36% other
Land boundaries: 2,196 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 4 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 3,218 km
PEOPLE
Population: 8,273,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Swede(s); adjective-Swedish
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous white population; small
Lappish minority
Religion: 92% Evangelical Lutheran, 7% other Protestant,
Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, 1% other
Language: Swedish, small Lapp- and Finnish-speaking
minorities
Literacy: 99%
Labor force: 4.2 million; 6.4% agriculture, forestry,
fishing; 29.2% mining and manufacturing; 7.2% construc-
tion; 13.6% commerce; 6.5% transportation and communica-
tions; 29.8% services including government; 5% banking;
75,000 or 1.8% unemployed (average annual 1977)
Organized labor: 80% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Sweden
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Stockholm
Political subdivisions: 24 provinces, 624 communes, 224
towns
Legal system: civil law system influenced by customary
law; Acts of 1809, 1810, 1866, and 1949 serve as constitution;
legal education at Universities of Lund, Stockholm, and
Uppsala; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, with reser-
vations
National holiday: Birthday of the King, 30 April
Branches: legislative authority rests with parliament
(Riksdag); executive power vested in cabinet, responsible to
parliament; Supreme Court, 6 superior courts, 108 lower
courts
Government leaders: King Carl XVI Gustaf; Prime
Minister Thorbjorn Falldin
Suffrage: universal, but not compulsory, over age 20
Elections: every 3 years (next in September 1979)
Political parties and leaders: Moderate Coalition (con-
servative), Gosta Bohman; Center, Thorbjorn Falldin;
Liberal, Ola Ullsten; Social Democratic, Olof Palme; Left
Party Communist, Lars Werner; Swedish Communist Party,
Roland Petersson; Swedish Workers' Party, Rolf Hagel;
Communist League of Marxist Leninists-Revolutionary
(KFML-R), Frank Baude
Voting strength (1976 election): 15.6% Moderate Coali-
tion, 24.1% Center, 11.0% Liberal, 42.9% Social Democratic,
4.7% Communist, 1.7% other
Communists: 17,000; a number of sympathizers as
indicated by the 257,967 Communist votes cast in 1973
elections; an additional 17,274 votes cast for Maoist KFML
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EC (Free
Trade Agreement), EFTA, ESRO, FAO, GATT, IAEA,
IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU,
ISO, ITU, IWC-International Whaling Commission,
IWC-International Wheat Council, Nordic Council,
OECD, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GDP: $78.5 billion, $9,000 per capita (1977); 53.8%
consumption, 20.3% investment, 28.7% government; -0.4%
inventory change; -2.4% net imports of goods and services;
1977 growth rate -2.5% in constant prices
Agriculture: animal husbandry predominates with milk
and dairy products accounting for 40% of farm income;
main crops-grains, sugar beets, potatoes; 80% self-suffi-
cient; food shortages-oils and fats, tropical products; caloric
intake, 2,903 calories per day per capita (1975)
Fishing: catch 193,300 metric tons (1976), exports $28
million, imports $139 million
Major industries: iron and steel, precision equipment
(bearings, radio and telephone parts, armaments), shipbuild-
ing, wood pulp and paper products, processed foods, textiles,
chemicals
Shortages: coal, petroleum, textile fibers, potash, salt
Crude steel: 5.1 million metric tons produced (1976), 625
kg per capita
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Electric power: 25,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 87.5
billion kWh produced (1977), 10,600 kWh per capita
Exports: $18,839 million (f.o.b., 1977); machinery, motor
vehicles and ships, wood pulp, paper products, iron and steel
products, metal ores and scrap, chemicals
Imports: $20,022 million (c.i.f., 1977); machinery, motor
vehicles, petroleum and petroleum products, textile yarn
and fabrics, iron and steel, chemicals, food, and live animals
Major trade partners: (1976) 15% West Germany, 12%
U.K., 6% U.S., 9% Norway, 8% Denmark; 49% EC-9; 6%
U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe
Aid: donor: economic aid authorized (ODA and OOF),
$1,978 million (1970-76)
Budget: 1976-revenues $22.5 billion, expenditures $23.0
billion
Monetary conversion rate: 4.48 kroner=US$1 average
exchange rate 1977
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 12,220 km total; Swedish State Railways (SJ)-
11,179 km standard gage (1.435 m), 6,959 km electrified and
1,152 km double track; 182 km 0.891-meter gage; 159 km
rail ferry service; privately-owned railways-511 km stand-
ard gage (1.435 m), 332 km electrified; 189 km 0.891-meter
gage electrified
Highways: 97,400 km total; 51,899 km bitumen, concrete;
20,659 km bituminous treated, gravel, improved earth;
24,842 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 2,052 km navigable for small steamers
and barges
Ports: 17 major, and 30 minor
Civil air: 63 major transports (including 1 leased in)
Airfields: 243 total, 236 usable; 131 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 7 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 85 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: excellent domestic and interna-
tional facilities; 5.67 million telephones (68.9 per 100 popl.);
9 AM, 91 FM, and 240 TV stations; 10 submarine cables,
including 4 coaxial; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,881,000; 1,670,000 fit
for military service; 55,000 reach military age (19) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$2.91 billion; about 9% of central government budget
LAND
41,440 kmz; 10% arable, 43% meadows and pastures, 20%
waste or urban, 24% forested, 3% inland water
Land boundaries: 1,884 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,293,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate -0.1% (1-73 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Swiss (sing. & pl.); adjective-Swiss
Ethnic divisions: total population-69% German, 19%
French, 10% Italian, 1% Romansch, 1% other; Swiss
nationals-74% German, 20% French, 4% Italian, 1%
Romansch, 1% other
Religion: 53% Protestant, 46% Roman Catholic
Language: Swiss nationals-74% German, 20% French,
4% Italian, 1% Romansch, 1% other; total population-69%
German, 19% French, 10% Italian, 1% Romansch, 1% other
Literacy: 98%
Labor force: 3.0 million, about one-fifth foreign workers,
mostly Italian; 16% agriculture and forestry, 47% industry
and crafts, 20% trade and transportation, 5% professions, 2%
in public service, 10% domestic and other; approximately
0.4% unemployed in August 1975
Organized labor: 20% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Swiss Confederation
Type: federal republic
Capital: Bern
Political subdivisions: 22 cantons (3 divided into half
cantons); a local referendum held in Bern Canton in 1975
indicated that three districts wished to form a separate
canton for a portion of the French-speaking Jura region
Legal system: civil law system influenced by customary
law; constitution adopted 1874, amended since; judicial
review of legislative acts, except with respect to Federal
decrees of general obligatory character; legal education at
Universities of Bern, Geneva and Lausanne, and four other
university schools of law; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdic-
tion, with reservations
National holiday: 1 August
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Branches: bicameral parliament has legislative authority;
federal council (Bundesrat) has executive authority; justice
left chiefly to cantons
Government leader: Kurt Furgler (1-year term as
President began on January 1977), President
Suffrage: universal over age 20
Elections: held every 4 years; next elections 1978
Political parties and leaders: Social Democratic Party
(SPS), Arthur Schmid, president; Radical Democratic Party
(FDP), Henri Schmitt, president; Christian Conservative
People's Party (CVP), Franz Josef Kurmann, president; Swiss
People's Party (SVP), Hans Conzett, president; Communist
Party (PdA), Jean Vincent, leading Secretariat member;
National Action Party (N.A.), James Schwarzenbach
Voting strength (1975 election): 22.2% FDP, 20.6% CVP,
25.4% SPS, 10.2% BGB, 2.2% PdA, 2.5% N.A., 3.0% Rep,
6.2% LdU, 2.3% Lidus, 2.0% EvP, 1.3% POSH, 2.2% other
Communists: less than 60,000 votes in 1975 election
Other parties: Landesring (LdU); Republican Movement
(Rep); Liberal Democratic Union (Lidus); Evangelical Party
(EvP); Maoist Party (POSH/PSA)
Member of: ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EFTA,
ELDO (observer), ESRO, FAO, GATT, IAEA, ICAC, ICAO,
IEA, ILO, IMCO, IPU, ITU, IWC-International Wheat
Council, OECD, U.N. (permanent observer), UNESCO,
UPU, WCL, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $63.71 billion provisional (1977 at 1977 prices),
$10,097 per capita; 60.2% consumption, 20.3% investment,
12.8% government, net foreign balance 6.7% (1977); 1970-76
average growth rate 1.3%, constant prices
Agriculture: dairy farming predominates; less than 50%
self-sufficient; food shortages-fish, refined sugar, fats and
oils (other than butter), grains, eggs, fruits, vegetables, meat;
caloric intake, 3,190 calories per day per capita (1969-70)
Major industries: machinery, chemicals, watches, textiles,
precision instruments
Shortages: practically all important raw materials except
hydroelectric energy
Electric power: 12,000,000 kW capacity (1977); 46 billion
kWh produced (1977), 7,290 kWh per capita
Exports: $17.57 billion (f.o.b., 1977); principal items-
machinery and equipment, chemicals, precision instruments,
metal products, textiles, foodstuffs
Imports: $17.93 billion (c.i.f., 1977); principal items-
machinery and transportation equipment, metals and metal
products, foodstuffs, chemicals, textile fibers and yarns
Major trade partners: 56% EC (22% West Germany, 11%
France, 9% Italy, 7% U.K.); 9% EFTA (5% Austria); 7% U.S.;
5% Communist countries (1977)
Aid: donor: bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $321 million (1970-76)
Budget: receipts, $5,842 million, expenditures, $6,454
million, deficit, $612 million (1977)
Monetary conversion rate: 2.4035 Swiss francs=US$1
(average 1977, floating)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 5,098 km total; 2,895 km government-owned
(SBB), 2,822 km standard gage (1.435 m); 73 km narrow
gage (1.00 m); 1,339 km double track, 99% electrified;
2,203 km non-government owned, 710 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 1,418 km meter-gage (1.00 m), 75 km 0.790-me-
ter gage, 100% electrified
Highways: 62,145 km, all paved
Pipelines: 314 km crude oil; 1,046 km natural gas
Inland waterways: 65 km; Rhine River-Basel to Rhein-
felden, Schaffhausen to Constanz; in addition, there are 12
navigable lakes ranging in size from Lake Geneva to
Hallwilersee
Ports: 1 major (Basel), 2 minor
Civil air: 88 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased
in)
Airfields: 79 total, 72 usable; 40 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 8 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 12 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: excellent domestic, international,
and broadcast services; 4.02 million telephones (63.8 per 100
popl.); 8 AM, 94 FM, and 350 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,518,000; 1,315,000 fit
for military service; 48,000 reach military age (20) annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $1,141 million; 18% of central government budget
LAND
186,480 km2 (including 1,295 km2 of Israeli-occupied
territory); 48% arable, 29% grazing, 2% forest, 21% desert
Land boundaries: 2,196 km (1967) (excluding occupied
area 2,156 km)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
Coastline: 193 km
PEOPLE
Population: 8,124,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Syrian(s); adjective-Syrian
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Ethnic divisions: 90.3% Arab; 9.7% Kurds, Armenians,
and other
Religion: 70.5% Sunni Muslim, 16.3% other Muslim sects,
13.2% Christians of various sects
Language: Arabic, Kurdish, Armenian; French and
English widely understood
Literacy: about 40%
Labor force: 2 million; 50% agriculture, 19% industry
(including construction), 31% miscellaneous services; major-
ity unskilled; shortage of skilled labor
Organized labor: 5% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Syrian Arab Republic
Type: republic; under left-wing military regime since
March 1963
Capital: Damascus
Political subdivisions: 13 provinces and city of Damascus
administered as separate unit
Legal system: based on Islamic law and civil law system;
special religious courts; constitution promulgated in 1973;
legal education at Damascus University and University of
Aleppo; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 17 April
Branches: executive powers vested in President and
Council of Ministers; legislative power rests in the People's
Assembly; seat of power is the Ba'th Party Regional (Syrian)
Command
Government leader: President Hafiz Al-Asad
Suffrage: universal at age 18
Elections: People's Assembly election August 1977;
Presidential election February 1978
Political parties and leaders: ruling party is the Arab
Socialist Resurrectionist (Ba'th) Party; the "national front"
cabinet is dominated by Ba'thists, but includes independents
and members of the Syrian Arab Socialist Party (ASP), Arab
Socialist Union (ASU), and Syrian Communist Party (SCP)
Communists: mostly sympathizers, numbering about
5,000
Other political or pressure groups: non-Ba'th parties
have little effective political influence; Communist Party
ineffective; greatest threat to Ba'thist regime lies in
factionalism in Ba'th Party itself; conservative religious
leaders
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ITU,
IWC-International Wheat Council, NAM, OAPEC, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GDP: $5.9 billion (1976), $775 per capita; real GDP
growth rate 8%, 1976
Agriculture: main crops-cotton, wheat, barley and
tobacco; sheep and goat raising; self-sufficient in most foods
in years of good weather
Major industries: textiles, food processing, beverages,
tobacco; petroleum (est. 180,000 b/d production, 117,000
b/d refining capacity)
Electric power: 1,374,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.7 billion
kWh produced (1977), 210 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.1 billion projected (f.o.b., 1976); petroleum,
textiles and textile products, tobacco, fruits and vegetables,
cotton
Imports: $2.4 billion (c.i.f., 1976); machinery and metal
products, textiles, fuels, foodstuffs
Major trade partners: exports-Italy, West Germany,
U.S.S.R., Yugoslovia; imports-Switzerland, West Germany,
Italy, Saudi Arabia
Budget: 1978 official plan-revenues $4.6 billion (includ-
ing Arab aid payments), expenditures $4.6 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 3.95 Syrian pounds=US$1
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,543 km total; 1,281 km standard gage, 262
km narrow gage (1.050 m)
Highways: 11,500 km total; 6,930 km paved, 1,300 km
gravel or crushed stone, 2,470 km improved earth, 800 km
unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 672 km; of little importance
Pipelines: 1,304 km crude oil; 515 km refined products
Ports: 3 major (Tartus, Latakia, Baniyas), 2 minor
Civil air: 10 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 40 total, 34 usable; 25 with permanent-surface
runways; 22 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 2 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: good international and domestic
service; 177,000 telephones (2.2 per 100 popl.); 9 AM, no FM
and 5 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,824,000; 1,021,000 fit
for military service; about 96,000 reach military age (19)
annually
198
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TANZANIA
letlisn
TANZANIA Ocean
Legal system: based on English common law, Islamic law,
customary law, and German civil law system; permanent
constitution adopted 1977, replaced interim constitution
adopted 1965; judicial review of legislative acts limited to
matters of interpretation; legal education at University of
Dar es Salaam; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: "Union Day," 26 April
Branches: President Julius Nyerere has full executive
authority on the mainland; National Assembly dominated by
Nyerere and the Chama Cha Mapinduzi (Revolutionary
Party); National Assembly consists of 233 members, 72 from
Zanzibar, of which 10 are directly elected, 65 appointed
from the mainland, plus 96 directly elected from the
mainland; new constitution calls for popular election of some
members from Zanzibar; Vice President Aboud Jumbe
(President of Zanzibar) and the Revolutionary Council still
run Zanzibar despite the .efforts of Nyerere to integrate the
islands into the political system of the mainland
Government leader: President Julius Nyerere
Suffrage: universal adult
Political party and leaders: Chama Cha Mapinduzi
(Revolutionary Party), only political party, dominated by
Nyerere and Vice President Jumbe, his top lieutenant; party
was formed in 1977 as a result of the union of the
Tanganyika African National Union, the sole mainland
party, and the Afro-Shirazi Party, the only party in
Zanzibar; party union was part of effort by Nyerere to
integrate Zanzibar and mainland
Voting strength (October 1975 national elections): over 5
million registered voters; Nyerere received 95% of about 4
million votes cast; general parliamentary elections scheduled
for Fall of 1980
Communists: a few Communist sympathizers, especially
on Zanzibar
Member of: AFDB, Commonwealth, EAC, FAO, G-77,
GATT, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
(See reference map VQ
LAND
939,652 km2 (including islands of Zanzibar and Pemba,
2,642 km2); 6% inland water, 15% cultivated, 31% grassland,
48% bush forest, woodland; on mainland, 60% arable, of
which 40% cultivated on islands of Zanzibar and Pemba
Land boundaries: 3,883 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 50 nm
Coastline: 1,424 km (this includes 113 km Mafia Island;
177 km Pemba Island; and 212 km Zanzibar)
PEOPLE
Population: 16,838,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.0% (current)
Nationality: noun-Tanzanian(s); adjective-Tanzanian
Ethnic divisions: 99% native Africans consisting of well
over 100 tribes; 1% Asian, European, and Arab
Religion: Tanganyika-40% Animist, 30% Christian, 30%
Muslim; Zanzibar-almost all Muslim
Language: Swahili and English official, English primary
language of commerce, administration and higher education;
Swahili widely understood and generally used for communi-
cation between ethnic groups; first language of most people
is one of the local languages
Literacy: 15%-20%
Labor force: under 400,000 in paid employment, over
90% in agriculture
Organized labor: 15% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United Republic of Tanzania
Type: republic; single party on the mainland and on
Zanzibar
Capital: Dar es Salaam
Political subdivisions: 25 regions-20 on mainland, 5 on
Zanzibar islands
ECONOMY
Mainland:
GDP: $2.4 billion (1976), about $150 per capita; real
growth rate, 4% (1970-75)
Agriculture: main crops-cotton, coffee, sisal on mainland
Fishing: catch 180,746 metric tons (1975); exports valued
at $638,000, imports $1.1 million (1975)
Major industries: primarily agricultural processing
(sugar, beer, cigarettes, sisal twine), diamond mine, oil
refinery, shoes, cement, textiles, wood products
Electric power: 365,000 kW capacity (1977); 1,278
million kWh produced (1977), 80 kWh per capita
Exports: $468 million (f.o.b., 1977 projected); coffee,
cotton, sisal, cashew nuts, meat, diamonds, cloves, tobacco,
tea
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Imports: $795.6 million (c.i.f., 1977 projected); manufac-
tured goods, machinery and transport equipment, cotton
piece goods, crude oil, foodstuffs
Major trade partners: exports-China, U.K., Hong Kong,
India, U.S.; imports-U.K., China, West Germany, U.S.,
Japan
Aid: about $160 million in aid was committed in 1976
from EC, China, IMF, U.S.; China has extended $362
million in aid since 1964, primarily for Tan-Zam Railway
Budget: (1977 est.) receipts including grants, $655 million,
expenditures, $833 million
Monetary conversion rate: 8.4 Tanzanian shillings=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
Zanzibar:
GNP: $35 million (1967)
Agriculture: main crops-cloves, coconuts
Industries: agricultural processing
Electric power: see Tanzania (above)
Exports: $12.6 million (1968); cloves and clove products,
coconut products
Imports: $5.6 million (1968); mainly foodstuffs and
consumer goods
Major trade partners: imports-China, Japan, and
mainland Tanzania; exports-Singapore, China, Hong Kong,
Indonesia, India, Pakistan
Aid: U.K. principal source of aid until 1964; U.S. $86
million FY58-73; China is currently major source
Exchange rate: 8.4 Tanzanian shillings=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,555 km total; 960 km 1.067-meter gage;
2,595 km meter gage (1.00 m), 6.4 km double track; 962 km
Tan-Zam Railroad 1.067-meter gage in Tanzania
Highways: total 17,010 km, 2,581 km paved; 5,529 km
gravel or crushed stone; 8,900 km improved earth
Pipelines: 982 km crude oil
Inland waterways: 1,168 km of navigable streams; several
thousand km navigable on Lakes Tanganyika, Victoria, and
Malawi
Ports: 3 major (Dar es Salaam, Mtwara, Tanga)
Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 103 total, 97 usable; 10 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 41 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: fair system of open wire, micro-
wave, and troposcatter; 68,400 telephones (0.4 per 100
popl.); 5 AM, no FM, 1 TV station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,659,000; 2,097,000 fit
for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978,
$141.3 million; 17% of central government budget
THAILAND
LAND
512,820 km2; 24% in farms, 56% forested, 20% other
Land boundaries: 4,868 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 3,219 km
PEOPLE
Population: 45,850,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Thai (sing. & pl.); adjective-Thai
Ethnic divisions: 75% Thai, 14% Chinese, 11% minorities
Religion: 95.5% Buddhist, 4% Muslim, 0.5% Christian
Language: Thai; English secondary language of elite
Literacy: 70%
Labor force: 78% agriculture, 15% services, 7% industry
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Thailand
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Bangkok
Political subdivisions: 71 centrally controlled provinces
Legal system: based on civil law system, with influences
of common law; new constitution being drafted; legal
education at Thammasat University; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: National Day, 5 December
Branches: King is head of state with nominal powers;
civilian government suspended on 20 October 1977; military
staffed Revolutionary Party governing in interim pending
drafting of new constitution; judiciary relatively indepen-
dent except in important political subversive cases
Government leaders: King Phumiphon Adundet, Prime
Minister General Kriangsak Chamanan
Elections: suspended
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THAILAND/TOGO
Political parties: suspended
Communists: strength of illegal Communist Party is about
1,200; Thai Communist insurgents throughout Thailand total
about 9,400
Member of: ADB, ANRPC, ASEAN, ASPAC, Colombo
Plan, ESCAP, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC,
IHO, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, SEAMES, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $18.2 billion (1977), $406 per capita;
growth in 1977 (7.0% real growth, 1972-77)
Agriculture: main crops-rice, sugar, corn, rubber,
tapioca
Fishing: catch 1.7 million metric tons (1976); major
fishery export, shrimp, 15,218 metric tons, about $66
million, total marine export, about $118 million (1976)
Major industries: agricultural processing, textiles, wood
and wood products, cement, tin and tungsten ore mining;
world's second largest tungsten producer and third largest tin
producer
Shortages: fuel sources, including coal, petroleum; scrap
iron, and fertilizer
Electric power: 2,829,000 kW capacity (1977); 10.9
billion kWh produced (1977), 245 kWh per capita
Exports: $3.6 billion (f.o.b., 1977); rice, sugar, corn,
rubber, tin, tapioca, kenaf
Imports: $4.6 billion (c.i.f., 1977); machinery and
transport equipment, fuels and lubricants, base metals,
chemicals, and fertilizer
Major trade partners: exports-Japan, U.S., Singapore,
Netherlands, Hong Kong, Malaysia; imports-Japan, U.S.,
West Germany, U.K.; about 1% or less trade with
Communist countries
Aid: OPEC, $7.4 million (1975-76); U.S., economic $164.2
million (1970-76), military $580.0 million (1970-76); West-
ern countries, $573.6 million (1970-76)
Budget: (FY78) planned receipts $4,050 million; 19.5%
military, 80.5% civilian
Monetary conversion rate: 20.4 baht=US$1 (February
1978)
Fiscal year: 1 October-30 September
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 3,833 km meter gage (1.00 m), 97 km double
track
Highways: 28,806 km total; 14,773 km paved, 4,731 km
crushed stone or gravel, 9,302 km earth and laterite
Inland waterways: 3,999 km principal waterways; 3,701
km with navigale depths of 0.9 in or more throughout the
year; numerous minor waterways navigable by shallow-
draft native craft
Ports: 2 major, 16 minor
Civil air: 25 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 154 total, 153 usable; 55 with permanent-
surface runways; 10 with runways 2,440-3,659 in, 29 with
runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: service to general public adequate;
bulk of service to government activities provided by
radiocommunications stations and radio-relay network;
satellite ground station; 312,000 telephones; over 3 million
radios; and over 650,000 televisions; approx. 150 AM, 15
FM, and 10 TV transmitters in government-controlled
networks
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 11,244,000; 6,844,000
fit for military service; about 503,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 September
1978, $760.7 million; 18.8% of central government budget
LAND
56,980 km2; nearly one-half is arable, under 15%
cultivated
Land boundaries: 1,646 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 56 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,458,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.8% (current)
Nationality: noun-Togolese (sing. & pl.); adjective-
Togolese
Ethnic divisions: 37 tribes; largest and most important are
Ewe in south and Cabrais in north; under 1% European and
Syrian-Lebanese
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Religion: about 20% Christian, 5% Muslim, 75% animist
Language: French, both official and language of com-
merce; major African languages are Ewe and Mina in the
south and Dagomba and Kabie in the north
Literacy: 54.9% of school age (7-14) currently in school
Labor force: over 90% of population engaged in
subsistence agriculture; about 30,000 wage earners, evenly
divided between public and private sectors
Organized labor: 1 national union, the CNTT organized
in 1972
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Togo
Type: republic; under military rule since January 1967
Capital: Lome
Political subdivisions: 21 circumscriptions
Legal system: based on French civil law and customary
practice; no constitution; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 27 April
Branches: military government, with civilian-dominated
cabinet, took over on 14 April 1967, replacing provisional
government created after January coup; no legislature;
separate judiciary including State Security Court established
1970
Government leader: General Gnassingbe Eyadema, Presi-
dent, Minister of National Defense, and Armed Forces Chief
of Staff
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: presidential referendum of January 1972
elected Gen. Eyadema for indefinite period
Political party: single party formed by President Eya-
dema in September 1969, Rassemblement du People
Togolais, structure and staffing of party closely controlled by
government
Communists: no Communist Party; possibly some
sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, CEAO (observer), EAMA, ECA,
ECOWAS, ENTENTE, FAO, G-77, GATT, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $525 million (1975), about $210 per capita;
estimated real growth 1966-70, 5.3% average annual rate
Agriculture: main cash crops-coffee, cocoa, cotton;
major food crops-yams, cassava, corn, beans, rice, millet,
sorghum, fish; must import some foodstuffs
Major industries: phosphate mining, agricultural process-
ing, handicrafts, textiles, beverages
Electric power: 30,000 kW capacity (1977); 110 million
kWh produced (1977), 45 kWh per capita
Exports: $128 million (f.o.b., 1976); phosphates, cocoa,
coffee, palm kernels, and cassava
Imports: $162 million (c.i.f., 1976); consumer goods, fuels,
machinery, tobacco, foodstuffs
Major trade partners: mostly with France and other EC
countries
Aid: 1975 disbursements-France, $13.6 million; West
Germany, $2.5 million; EEC, $1.5 million; U.S., $1.1 million;
FY59-75 total commitments-EC, $62.9 million; U.S., $30
million; U.N., $16.8 million; others, $24.6 million; China
(1972), $45 million
Budget: (1977 proposed), revenues and expenditures,
$221 million
Monetary conversion rate:
Africaine 249.35 francs=US$l
Fiscal year: calendar
COMMUNICATIONS
Communaute
as of February
Financiere
1977
Railroads: 442 km meter gage (1.00 m), single track
Highways: approx. 6,974 km total; 1,208 km paved, 166
km improved earth, 4,600 unimproved earth
Inland waterways: section of Mono River and
km of coastal lagoons and tidal creeks
Ports: 1 major (Lome), 1 minor
Civil air: 4 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 11 total, 11 usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway 2,440-3,659 m
Telecommunications: fair system based on skeletal
network of open-wire lines supplemented by a radio relay
route radiocommunication stations; only center is Lome;
6,300 telephones (0.3 per 100 popl.); 2 AM stations, I FM
radio station, 3 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 540,000; 279,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Supply: most military materiel obtained from France
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $19,927,920; 7.8% of central government budget
LAND
997 km' (150 islands); 77% arable, 3% pasture, 13% forest,
3% inland water, 4% other
WATER
Limits of
Coastline:
territorial waters
419 km (est.)
PEOPLE
Population: 90,000 (July 1978), average
rate 0.3% (current)
Nationality: noun-Tongan(s); adjective-Tongan
Ethnic divisions: Polynesian, about 300 Europeans
Religion: Christian; Free Wesleyan Church claims over
30,000 adherents
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FIJI TONGA
*Nula alofa
Language: Tongan, English
Literacy: 90%-95%; compulsory education for children
between ages of 6-14
Labor force: agriculture 10,303; mining 599
Organized labor: unorganized
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Kingdom of Tonga
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: Nukualofa
Political subdivisions: 3 main island groups (Tongatapu,
Haapi, Vavau)
Legal system: based on English law
Branches: Executive (King and Privy Council); Legisla-
tive (Legislative Assembly composed of 7 nobles elected by
their peers, 7 elected representatives of the people, 8
Ministers of the Crown; the King appoints one of the 7
nobles to be the speaker); Judiciary (Sup_eme Court,
magistrate courts, Land Court)
Government leaders: King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV; Pre-
mier, Prince Tu'ipelehake (younger brother of the King)
Suffrage: granted to all literate adults over 21 years of age
who pay taxes
Elections: held every 3 years, last in April 1978
Communists: none known
Member of: ADB, Commonwealth
ECONOMY
GNP: $39 million (1975), $400 per capita
Agriculture: largely dominated by coconut and banana
production with subsistence crops of taro, yams, sweet
potatoes, and bread fruit
Electric power: 4,000 kW capacity (1977); 8 million kWh
produced (1977), 85 kWh per capita
Exports: $10 million (f.o.b., 1975); 65% copra, 7% coconut
products, 8% bananas
Imports: $28 million (c.i.f., 1975); food, machinery, and
petroleum
Major trade partners: (FY74) exports-25% Netherlands,
22% Australia, 20% New Zealand, 11% Norway; imports-
63% New Zealand and Australia
Budget: (FY76) revenues $6.7 million, expenditures $8.3
million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Tonga dollar=US$1.40
(1976)
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 249 km total (1974); 177 km rolled stone; 72
km coral base
Ports: 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 4 total, 4 usable; 1 with grass runway
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: 552 telephones (2.2 per 100 popl.);
11,000 radio sets; no TV sets; 1 AM station
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
It Atlantic Ocean
LAND
5,128 km2; 41.9% in farms (25.7% cropped or fallow, 1.5%
pasture, 10.6% forests, and 4.1% unused or built-on), 58.1%
outside of farms, including grassland, forest, built-up area,
and wasteland
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 362 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,045,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1,3% (4-60 to 4-70)
Nationality: noun-Trinidadian(s), Tobagonian(s); adjec-
tive-Trinidadian
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TONGA/TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
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Ethnic divisions: 43% Negro, 40% East Indian, 14%
mixed, 1% white, 2% other
Religion: 26.8% Protestant, 31.2% Roman Catholic, 23.0%
Hindu, 6.0% Muslim, 13.0% unknown
Language: English
Literacy: 95%
Labor force: 393,800 (July 1975), 13.5% agriculture,
20.0% mining, quarrying, and manufacturing, 17.4% com-
merce; 15.7% construction and utilities; 7.5% transportation
and communications; 23.0% services, 2.9% other
Organized labor: 30% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
Type: independent state since August 1962; in August
1976 country officially became a republic severing legal ties
with British crown
Capital: Port-of-Spain
Political subdivisions: 8 counties (29 wards, Tobago is
30th)
Legal system: based on English common law; constitution
came into effect 1976; judicial review of legislative acts in
the Supreme Court; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: 31 August
Branches: legislative branch consists of 36-member
elected House of Representatives and 31-member appointed
Senate; executive is cabinet led by the Prime Minister;
judiciary is headed by the Chief Justice and includes a Court
of Appeal, High Court, and lower courts
Government leaders: Prime Minister Dr. Eric Williams,
President Ellis Clarke
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: elections to be held at intervals of not more
than five years; last election held 13 September 1976
Political parties and leaders: People's National Move-
ment (PNM), Dr. Eric Williams; United Labor Front (ULF),
Bosdeo Panday; Democratic Labor Party (DLP), Dr.
Romesh Mootoo; Democratic Action Congress (DAC),
Arthur Napoleon Raymond Robinson; West Indian National
Party (WINP), Ashford Sinanani; Tapia House Movement,
Lloyd Best
Voting strength (1976 election): 56% of registered voters
cast ballots; PNM captured 24 seats in House of Representa-
tives, ULF 10, and DAC the two Tobago seats
Communists: not significant
Other political pressure groups: National Joint Action
Congress (NJAC), radical anti-government Black-identity
organization; United Revolutionary Organization (URO),
Marxist amalgam; Trinidad and Tobago Peace Council,
leftist organization affiliated with the World Peace Council;
Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce;
Trinidad and Tobago Labor Congress, moderate labor
federation; Council of Progressive Trade Unions, radical
labor federation
Member of: CARICOM, Commonwealth, FAO, G-77,
GATT, IADB, IBRD, International Coffee Agreement,
ICAO, IDA, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ISO, ITU, IWC-
International Wheat Council, NAM, OAS, SELA, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $3,159 million (1977), $3,060 per capita; 49%
mining and petroleum, 6% manufacturing, 4% agriculture,
41% other; growth rate 1977, 7.7% est.
Agriculture: main crops-sugarcane, cocoa, coffee, rice,
citrus, bananas; largely dependent upon imports of food
Fishing: catch 13,880 metric tons (1976); exports $1.1
million (1975), imports $4.5 million (1975)
Major industries: petroleum, tourism, food processing,
cement
Electric power: 375,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.3 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,250 kWh per capita
Exports: $2.2 billion (f.o.b., 1977); petroleum and
petroleum products ($2.0 million), sugar, cocoa
Imports: $1.8 billion (c.i.f., 1977); crude petroleum ($0.9
billion), machinery, fabricated metals, transportation equip-
ment, manufactured goods, food
Major trade partners: (excludes trade under petroleum
agreement) exports-U.S. 71%, U.K. 9%, Caricom 15%;
imports-U.S. 45%, U.K. 17%, Caricom 6% (1976)
Aid: economic-from U.S. (FY46-76), $40.5 million in
grants; from international organizations (FY53-75), $14.8
million
Budget: (1977) central government revenues $1 billion,
expenditures $1 billion (current $487 million, investment
$156 million, development project funds, $371 million)
Monetary conversion
TT$2.40= US$1
Fiscal year: calendar
rate: tied to US dollar in 1976;
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 3,100 km total; 2,800 km paved, 200 km
gravel, 100 km improved earth
Pipelines: 1,032 km crude oil and refined products; 832
km natural gas
Ports: 3 major (Port of Spain, Chaquaramars
Tembladora), 6 minor
Civil air: 13 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 8 total, 7 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 4 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
204
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TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO/TUNISIA
-
and 19 nance,uf3%
and c construction1.4 ; 5% tgrade lture
Telecommunications: excellent
and Guyana; service
good turing bor
tropospheric scatter links to Barbados a 0,400
laboro mining;
skillutilitiedes
shortage o and
tran local service; 1 Atlantic Ocean 2 saA~li 2 FMtI and 73 TV 10%520%a unemployed nications
Organized labor: 25% of labor force; General Union of
stations telephones (6.6 per 100 p p ),
Tunisian Workers (UGTT), quasi-independent of Destourian
s
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 261,000; 184,000 fit for
military service
Supply: mostly from U.K.
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1977, $48.4 million; about 4.8% of central
government budget
TUNISIA
LAND
164,206 km2; 28% arable land and tree crops, 23% range
and esparto grass, 6% forest, 43% desert, waste or urban
Land boundaries: 1,408 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (fishing 12
nm exclusive fisheries zone follows the 50-meter isobath for
part of the coast, maximum 65 nm)
Coastline: 1,143 km (includes offshore
PEOPLE
Population: 6,242,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.7% (current)
Nationality: noun-Tunisian(s); adjective-Tunisian
Ethnic divisions: 98% Arab, 1% European, less than
Jewish
Religion: 95% Muslim, 4% Christian,
Language: Arabic (official),
(commerce)
Literacy: about 32%
Socialist Party
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Tunisia
Type: republic
Capital: Tunis
Political subdivisions: 17 governorates (provinces)
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
Islamic law; constitution patterned on Turkish and U.S.
constitutions adopted 1959; some judicial review of legisla-
tive acts in the Supreme Court in joint session; legal
education at Institute of Higher Studies and Ecole Super-
ieure de Droit of the University of Tunis; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 1 June
Branches: executive dominant; unicameral legislative
largely advisory; judicial, patterned on French system and
Koranic law
Government leaders: President Habib Bourguiba; Prime
Minister Hedi Nouira
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: national elections held every 5 years; last
elections 2 November 1974
Political party and leader: Destourian Socialist Party,
Habib Bourguiba
Voting strength (1974 election): 100% Destourian Social-
ist Party
Communists: a small number of nominal Communists,
mostly students; Tunisian Communist Party proscribed in
January 1963
i
-
Member of: AFDB, Arab League, AIOEC, EC (assoc
ation until 1974), FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, I IDA,
IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, DA,
IMF, IOOC, ITU, IWC-International Wheat Council,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
th
l
grow
GDP: $4.5 billion (1977 est.), $760 per capita; rea
of 3% in 1977
Agriculture: cereal farming and livestock herding pre-
dominate; main crops-wheat, barley, olives, fruits (espe-
cially citrus), viticulture, vegetables, dates
Major sectors: tourism, mining, food processing, textiles
and leather, light manufacturing, construction materials,
chemical fertilizers, petroleum
Electric power: 425,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.4 billion
kWh produced (1977), 235 kWh per capita
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TUNISIA/TURKEY
Exports: $1.6 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 25% petroleum, 20%
Phosphates, 18% olive oil
Imports: $2.0 billion (c.i.f., 1977); 36% raw materials, 23%
machinery and equipment, 14% consumer goods, 19% food
and beverages, 3% energy, 5% other
Major trade partners: exports-France, Italy, West
Germany
Monetary conversion rate: I Tunisian dinar (TD)=
US$2.32
Fiscal year: calendar
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,089 km total; 503 km standard gage (1.435
m), 1,586 km meter gage (1.00 m)
Highways: 17,140 km total; 7,940 km bituminous, 660 km
gravel; 2,000 km improved earth; 6,540 km unimproved
earth
Pipelines: 797 km crude oil; 10 km refined products; 72
km natural gas
Ports: 4 major, 8 minor
Civil air: 14 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 33 total, 26 usable; 11 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways 2,440-3,659 m; 14 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 1 seaplane station
Telecommunications: the system is above the African
average in amount and capacity of facilities which consist of
open-wire lines with multiconductor cable or radio relay;
key centers are Safagis, Susah, Bizerte, and Tunis; 100,000
telephones (1.7 per 100 popl.); 3 AM, 3 FM, and 7 TV
stations; 3 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,547,000; 850,000 fit
for military service; about 59,000 reach military age (20)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $153 million; 6% of central government budget
TURKEY
LAND
766,640 km2; 35% cropland, 25% meadows and pastures,
23% forested, 17% other
Land boundaries: 2,574 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm except in
Black Sea where it is 12 nm (fishing 12 nm)
Coastline: 7,200 km
PEOPLE
Population: 43,059,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Turk(s); adjective-Turkish
Ethnic divisions: 90% Turkish, 7% Kurd, 3% other
Religion: 99% Muslim (mostly Sunni), 1% other (mostly
Christian and Jewish)
Language: Turkish, Kurdish, Arabic
Literacy: 55%
Labor force: 13.8 million; 68% agriculture, 16% industry,
16% service; substantial shortage of skilled labor; ample
unskilled labor
Organized labor: 10% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Turkey
Type: republic
Capital: Ankara
Political subdivisions: 67 provinces
Legal system: derived from various continental legal
systems; constitution adopted 1961; judicial review of
legislative acts by Constitutional Court; legal education at
Universities of Ankara and Istanbul; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Republic Day, 29 October
Branches: President elected by parliament; Prime Minis-
ter appointed by President from members of parliament;
Prime Minister is effective executive; cabinet, selected by
Prime Minister and approved by President, must command
majority support in lower house; parliament bicameral
under constitution promulgated in 1961; National Assembly
has 450 members serving 4 years; Senate has 150 elected
members, one-third elected every 2 years, 15 appointed by
the President to 6-year terms (one-third appointed every 2
years), and 19 life members; highest court for ordinary
criminal and civil cases is Court of Cassation, which hears
appeals directly from criminal, commercial, basic, and peace
courts
Government leaders: President Fahri Koruturk; Prime
Minister Bulent Ecevit
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TURKEY/TUVALU
Suffrage: universal over age 21
Elections: National Assembly and Senate (1/3 of seats),
Republican People's Party won a plurality in June 1977;
Presidential (1980)
Political parties and leaders: Justice Party (JP),
Suleyman Demirel; Republican People's Party (RPP), Bulent
Ecevit; National Salvation Party (NSP), Necmettin Erbakan;
Democratic Party (DP), Ferruh Bozbeyli; Republican
Reliance Party (RRP), Turban Feyzioglu; Nationalist Action
Party (NAP), Alpaslan Turkes; Unity Party (UP), Mustafa
Timisi; Communist Party illegal
Communists: strength and support negligible
Other political or pressure groups: military forced
resignation of Demirel government in March 1971 and
remains an influential force in national affairs
Member of: ASSIMER, CENTO, Council of Europe, EC
(associate member), ECOSOC, FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMCO, IMF,
IOOC, IPU, ITC, ITU, NATO, OECD, Regional Coopera-
tion for Development, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $45.0 billion (1977), $1,070 per capita; 4.5% real
growth 1977, 7%-8% average annual real growth 1970-76
Agriculture: main products-cotton, tobacco, cereals,
sugar beets, fruits, nuts, and livestock products; self-suffi-
cient in food in average years, 2,900 calories per day per
capita (1972)
Major industries: textiles, food processing, mining (coal,
chromite, copper, boron minerals), steel, petroleum
Crude steel: 1.9 million tons produced (1976), 45 kg per
capita
Electric power: 4,900,000 kW capacity (1977); 21.5
billion kWh produced (1977), 505 kWh per capita
Exports: $1,750 million (f.o.b., 1977); cotton, tobacco,
fruits, nuts, metals, livestock products, textiles and clothing
Imports: $5,800 million (c.i.f., 1977); crude oil, machin-
ery, transport equipment, metals, mineral fuels, fertilizers,
chemicals
Major trade partners: 22% West Germany, 9% U.S., 9%
Iraq, 7% U.K., 7% Italy (1976)
Budget: (FY77) revenues $11.2 billion, expenditures $12.2
billion, deficit $1.01 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 25.00 Turkish liras=US$1 (1
March 1978)
Fiscal year: 1 March-28 February
COMMUNICATIONS km
Railroads: 8,253 km standard gage (1.435 m); 143
double track; 72 km electrified
Highways: 60,000 km total; 21,000 km bituminous;
28,000 km gravel or crushed stone; 2,500 km improved
earth; 8,500 km unimproved earth
Inland waterways: approx. 1,689 km
Pipelines: 1,288 km crude oil; 2,055 km refined products
Ports: 10 major, 35 minor
Civil air: 24 major transport aircraft (including 5 leased
in)
Airfields: 120 total, 101 usable; 57 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 3 with runways over 3,660 m, 22 with
runways 2,440-3,659 m, 23 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: new trunk domestic radio-relay
net, good international service; 1.1 million telephones (2.7
per 100 popl.); 40 AM, 4 FM, and 36 TV stations; 1
submarine cable; Comsat station near completion
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 10,665,000; 6,282,000
fit for military service; about 461,000 reach military age (20)
annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 28
February 1979, $2.3 billion; about 22% of proposed central
government budget
TUVALU
(formerly Ellice Islands)
UNITE'?Q
STATES
__--AP~ p`
U~ EA
GILBERT
ISLANDS
TUVALU
NOTE: On October 1, 1975, by Constitutional Order, the
Ellice Islands were formally separated from the British
colony of Gilbert and Ellice Islands, thus forming the new
colony of Tuvalu. The remaining islands in the former
Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony were renamed the Gilbert
Islands.
The new colony of Tuvalu includes the islands of
Nanumanga, Nanumea, Nui, Niutao, Vaitupu, and those
islands claimed by the United States: Funafuti, Nukufetau,
Nukulailai, and Nurakita.
LAND
26 km'
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 3 nm
Coastline: about 24 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,000 (preliminary total from census of 8
December 1973)
Ethnic divisions: Polynesian
Religion: Protestant
Literacy: less than 50%
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Tuvalu
Type: British crown colony with a large measure of
self-government; independence expected in October 1978
Capital: Funafuti
House of Assembly: eight members
Chief minister: Toalipi Lauti
Her Majesty's Commissioner (Governor): Thomas Layng
ECONOMY
See Gilbert Islands for economic data
Electric power: 175,000 kW capacity (1977); 788 million
kWh produced (1977); 65 kWh per capita
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 8 km gravel
Inland waterways: none
Ports: l minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 1 total; 1 usable with runway 1,220-2,439 m; 1
seaplane station
Telecommunications: 1 AM station; about 300 telephones
(0.5 per 100 pop].); 4,000 radio sets
UGANDA
LAND
235,690 km2; 21% inland water and swamp, including
territorial waters of Lake Victoria, about 21% cultivated,
13% national parks, forest, and game reserves, 45% forest,
woodland, and grassland
Land boundaries: 2,680 km
PEOPLE
Population: 12,780,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 3.5% (current)
Nationality: noun-Ugandan(s); adjective-Ugandan
Ethnic divisions: 99% African, 1% European, Asian, Arab
Religion: about 60% nominally Christian, 5%-10% Mus-
lim, rest animist
Language: English official; Luganda and Swahili widely
used; other Bantu and Nilotic languages
Literacy: about 20%-40%
Labor force: estimated 4.5 million, of which about
250,000 in paid labor, remaining in subsistence activities
Organized labor: 125,000 union members
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Uganda
Type: republic independent since October 1962
Capital: Kampala
Political subdivisions: 10 provinces and 34 districts
Legal system: based on English common law and
customary law; constitution adopted 1967; present govern-
ment rules despotically, has intimidated judicial officials and
has made constitution of no consequence; legal education at
Makerere University, Kampala; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 9 October
Branches: Gen. Amin rules by decree; assisted by Council
of Ministers and Defense Council, a group of military
officers
Government leader: Gen. Idi Amin, President for life
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: none scheduled by military government
Political parties: none
Communists: possibly a few sympathizers
Member of: AFDB, Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ISO, ITU,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $870 million (1976, at constant prices), $150 per
capita; 0% real growth between 1970-74
Agriculture: main cash crops-coffee, cotton; other cash
crops-tobacco, tea, sugar, fish, livestock
Fishing: catch 169,700 metric tons (1975) million (1971)
Major industries: agricultural processing (textiles, sugar,
coffee, plywood, beer), cement, copper smelter, corrugated
iron sheet, shoes, fertilizer
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July 1978
UGANDA/U.S.S.R.
Electric power: 228,500 kW capacity (1977); 1,028
million kWh produced (1977), 80 kWh per capita
Exports: $322 million (f.o.b., 1976 est.); coffee, cotton, tea,
copper (1971) Petroleum
Imposts: $237 million ( piece goods, metals, transport
products, machinery, cotton
equipment
Major trade partners: U.K., U.S., Kenya
Monetary conversion rate: 8.4 Uganda shillings=US$l
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS single track
Railroads: 1,216 km, meter gage (1.00 m),
Highways: 6,763 km total; 1,934 km paved; 4,829 km
crushed stone, gravel, and laterite; remainder earth roads
and tracks (est.)
Inland waterways: Lake Victoria, Lake Albert, Lake
Kyoga, Lake George, and Lake Edward (9,670
River and Victoria Nile (610 km)
Civil air: 5 major transport aircraft (including 1 leased in)
Airfields: 49 total, 48 usable; 5 with permanent-surface
Yrunways
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 3 2,440-3,659 in, 12 with runways 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: fair system based on open wire
lines and low-capacity radiooreela 6 TV st6,0o 0;teleph antic FM , (0.4 per 100 popl.); 6 AM, Atl
Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, about 2,763,000; about
1,485,000 fit for military service
U.S.S.R.
LAND
22,274,000 km2; 9.3% cultivated, 37.1% forest and brush,
passte ture
2.6% urban, industrial, and transportation, 16.8%
and natural hay land, 34.2% desert,
Land boundaries: 20,619 km
WATER 12 nm (fishing 200
Limits of territorial waters (claimed):
nm)
Coastline: 46,670 km (incl. Sakhalin)
Language: more than 200 languages and dialects (at least
18 with more than 1 million speakers); 76% Slavic group, 8%
other Indo-European, 11% Altaic, 3% Uralian, 2% Caucasian
Literacy: 98.5% of population (ages 9-49) 25%
Labor force: civilian 137 million (mid-year 1977),
75% o
agriculture, unemployednot reported, shortage of skilled laborrreported
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Type: Communist state
Capital: Moscow
Political subdivisions: 15 union republics, 20 autonomous
republics, 6 krays, 121 oblasts, and 8 autonomous oblasts
Legal system: civil law system as modified by Communist
legal theory; revised constitution adopted 1977; no judicial
review of legislative acts; legal education at 18 universities
and 4 law institutes; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction 7 November
National holiday: October Revolution Day,
Branches: Council of Ministers (executive), Supreme
Soviet (legislative), Supreme Court of U.S.S.R. (judicial)
Government leaders: Leonid I. Brezhnev, General
Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party
viet Chairman Aleksey oN.t Kosygin, Chairman U.S.S.R. Supreme
Sov of the Council of
Ministers direct, equal
Suffrage: universal over age 18;
Elections: to Supreme Soviet every 5 years; 1,517 deputies
elected in 1974; 72.2% party members
Political party: Communist Party of the Soviet Union
(CPSU) only party permitted
Voting strength (1974 election): 153,237,112 persons over
18; allegedly 99.98% voted
Communists: over 16 million party members
Other political or pressure groups: Komsomol, trade
unions, and other organizations which facilitate Communist
control
PEOPLE annual
Population: 261,382,000 (July 1978), average
growth rate 0.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Soviet(s); adjective-Soviet
Ethnic divisions: 74% Slavic, 26% among some 170 ethnic
groups
Religion: 70% atheist, 18% Russian Orthodox, 9% Muslim,
3% other
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U.S.S.R./UNITFD ARAB EMIRATES
Member of: CEMA, Geneva Disarmament Conference,
IAEA, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, ILO, International Lead and
Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-
International Whaling Commission, IWC--International
Wheat Council, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, Warsaw Pact, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, Universal Copyright Convention
ECONOMY
GNP: $960.4 billion (1976, in 1976 U.S. prices), $3,742 per
capita; in 1977 percentage shares were-57% consumption,
29% investment, 14% government and other, including
defense (based on 1970 GNP in rubles at adjusted factor
cost); average annual growth rate of real GNP (1971-77),
3.8%, average annual growth rate (1976-77), 3.8%
Agriculture: principal food crops-grain (especially
wheat), Potatoes; main industrial crops-sugar, cotton,
sunflowers, and flax; degree of self-sufficiency depends on
fluctuations in crop yields; caloric intake, 3,250 calories per
day per capita in recent years
Fishing: catch 10.3 million metric tons (1975); exports
491,000 metric tons (1975), imports 26,700 metric tons
(1975)
Major industries: diversified, highly developed capital
goods industries; consumer goods industries comparatively
less developed
Shortages: natural rubber, bauxite and alumina, tantalum,
tin, tungsten and fluorspar
Crude steel: 160 million metric ton capacity as of t
January 1978; 147 million metric tons produced in 1977, 570
kg Per capita
Electric power: 239,800,000 kW capacity (1977); 1,152
billion kWh produced (1977), 4,430 kWh per capita
Exports: $45,228.6 million (f.o.b,, 1977); fuels (particu-
larly petroleum and derivatives), metals, agricultural prod-
ucts (timber, grain), and a wide variety of manufactured
goods (primarily capital goods)
Imports: $40,931.8 million (f.o.b., 1977); specialized and
complex machinery and equipment, textile fibers, consumer
manufactures, steel products (Particularly large diameter
Pipe), and any significant shortages in domestic production
(for example, grain imported following poor domestic
harvests)
Major trade partners: $86.2 billion (1977 total turnover);
trade 57% with Communist countries, 30% with industrial-
ized West
and 13
,
% with less developed countries
Aid: economic-to less developed countries (total ex-
tended 1977) $392 million; recipients included India $340
million; Jamaica, $30 million; Tanzania, $19 million;
economic extensions, $12.5 billion (1954-76); military-
(total extended 1977) $4.0 billion; principal recipients were
Syria, $0.9 billion; Algeria, $0.8 billion; Ethiopia, $0.7
billion; India, $0.6 billion; Tunisia, $0.5 billion; military
extensions, $22 billion (1955-76)
Official monetary conversion
(April 1977)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
rate: 0.7461 rubles=US$1:
Railroads: 139,805 km total; 137,972 km broad gage
(1.524 m); 1,833 km narrow
a
g
ge (mostly 0.750 m); 109,316
km broad gage single track; 40,399 km electrified; does not
include industrial lines (1977)
Highways: 1,564,000 km total; 322,000 km asphalt,
concrete, stone block; 372,000 km asphalt treated, gravel,
crushed stone; 870,000 km earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 146,400 kin navigable, exclusive of
Caspian Sea (1978)
Pipelines: 56,500 kmn crude oil; 13,000 km refined
products; 115,000 km natural gas
Ports: 52 major (most important: Leningrad, Murmansk,
Odessa, Novorossiysk, Ilichevsk, Vladivostok, Nakhodka,
Arkhangelsk, Riga, Tallinn, Kaliningrad, Liepaja, Ventspils,
Nikolayev, Sevastopol); 116 selected minor (1978)
Freight carried: rail-3,705 million metric tons, 3,330.0
billion metric ton/km (1977); highways-22.1 billion metric
tons, 360.0 billion metric ton/km (1976); waterway-520.0
million metric tons, 231.0 billion metric ton/km, excluding
Caspian Sea in approximately 16,000 waterway craft with
8,000,000 metric tons capacity (1977)
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
almost all desert
waste o
b
,
r ur
an
Land boundaries: 1,094 km (does not include boundaries
between adjacent U.A.E. states)
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 rim for all states
except Sharjah (12 nm)
Coastline: 1,448 km
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UNITED ARAB EMIRATES/UNITED KINGDOM
PEOPLE
Population: 656,000 (preliminary total from the census of
29 August 1975)
Ethnic divisions: Arabs 42%, South Asians 50% (fluctuat-
ing), other expatriates (includes Westerners and East Asians
8%
Religion: Muslim 96%, Christian,
Language: Arabic
Literacy: 25% est. (1975)
Labor force: 203,000 (1975 est.); 85% in industry; 2%
U.A.E. Arabs, 7% non-U.A.E. Arabs, 91% Indians, Pakistanis,
Iranians
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United Arab Emirates (composed of former
Trucial States)
Member states: Abu Dhabi; Ajman; Dubai; Fujairah; Ras
alKhaimah; Sharjah; Umm alQaiwain
Type: federation; constitution signed December 1971,
which delegated specified powers to the United Arab
Emirates central government and reserved other powers to
member shaykhdoms
Capital: Abu Dhabi
Legal system: secular codes are being introduced by the
U.A.E. Government and in several member shaykhdoms;
Islamic law remains very influential
National holiday: 2 December
Branches: Supreme Council of Rulers (7 members), from
which a President and Vice President are elected; Prime
Minister and Council of Ministers; National Consultative
Council; federal Supreme Court
Government leaders: Shaykh Zayid of Abu Dhabi,
President; Shaykh Rashid of Dubai, Vice President; Shaykh
Maktum of Dubai, Prime Minister
Suffrage: none
Elections: none
Political or pressure groups: none; a few small clandes-
tine groups are active
Member of: Arab League, G-77, IBRD, ICAO, ILO, IMF,
NAM, OAPEC, OPEC, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO,
WIPO
ECONOMY
Agriculture: food imported, but some dates, alfalfa,
vegetables, fruit, tobacco raised
Electric power: 700,000 kW capacity (1977); 1.5 billion
kWh produced (1977),
2,350
kWh per capita
Exports: $8.5 billion
($7.0
billion in oil, $0.3 billion
non-oil) (f.o.b., 1976);
crude
petroleum, pearls, fish
Imports: $3.3 billion (f.o.b., 1976); food, consumer and
capital goods
Major trade partners: U.K., U.S., Japan, India, EC
Aid: 1974-75 foreign aid totaled $1 billion; the 1975-76
budget committed $875 million to direct foreign aid; Abu
Dhabi Fund for Arab Economic and Social Development in
1975 lent $175 million to LDC's
Budget: total budget (1977), $2.6 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 1 U.A.E. Dirham=US$0.25
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 780 km bituminous, undetermined mileage of
earth tracks
Pipelines: 282 km crude oil
Ports: 3 major, 1 minor
Civil air: 13 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
in)
Airfields: 57 total, 41 usable; 12 with permanent-surface
runways; 3 with runways over 3,660 m, 1 with runway
2,440-3,659 m, 20 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: system is adequate; key centers are
Abu Dhabi and Dubai; 70,800 telephones (10.8 per 100
popl.); 4 AM, 2 FM, and 3 TV stations; 2 COMSAT ground
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 180,000; 90,000 fit for
military service
UNITED KINGDOM
LAND
243,978 km'; 30% arable, 50% meadow and pasture, 12%
waste or urban, 7% forested, 1% inland water
Land boundaries: 360 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 12,429 km
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PEOPLE
Population: 55,894,000 (July 1978) average annual
growth rate -0.1% (current)
Nationality: noun-Briton(s), British (collective p1.);
adjective-British
Ethnic divisions: 83% English, 9% Scottish, 5% Welsh, 3%
Irish
Religion: 27.0 million Church of England, 5.3 million
Roman Catholic, 2.0 million Presbyterians, 760,000 Method-
ist, 450,000 Jews (registered)
Language: English, Welsh (about 26% of population of
Wales), Scottish form of Gaelic (about 60,000 in Scotland)
Literacy: 98% to 99%
Labor force: (1974) 25.6 million; 1.6% agriculture, 1.4%
mining, 30.7% manufacturing, 6.2% government, 7.2%
transportation and utilities, 5.2% construction, 10.6% dis-
tributive trades, 25.3% all services, 9.7% other; 2.1%
unemployed
Organized labor: 40% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
Type: constitutional monarchy
Capital: London
635 parliamentary constituencies
Legal system: common law tradition with early Roman
and modern continental influences; no judicial review of
Acts of Parliament; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction,
with reservations
National holiday: Celebration
16 June
Branches: legislative
of Birthday of the Queen,
authority resides in Parliament;
executive authority lies with collectively responsible cabinet
led by Prime Minister; House of Lords is supreme judicial
authority and highest court of appeal
Government leader: Prime Minister James Callaghan
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: at discretion of Prime Minister, but must be
held before expiration of a 5-year electoral mandate; last
election 10 October 1974
Political parties and leaders: Conservative, Margaret
Thatcher; Labor, James Callaghan; Liberal, David Steel;
Communist, Gordan McLennan; Scottish National, William
Wolfe; Plaid Cymru, Phil Williams
Voting strength (1974 election): Conservative 277 seats
(35.9%); Labor 319 seats (39.3%); Liberal 13 seats (18.3%);
Scottish National 11 seats (2.8%); Plaid Cymru 3 seats (0.6%);
other 12 seats (3.2%)
Communists: 29,000
Other political or pressure groups: Trades Union
Congress, Confederation of British Industry, National
Farmers' Union
Member of: ADB, CENTO, Colombo Plan, Council of
Europe, DAC, EC, EEC, ELDO, ESRO, EURATOM, FAO,
GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICES, IDA, IEA, 1FC,
IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group,
IMCO, IMF, IOOC, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, IWC-Interna-
tional Whaling Commission, IWC-International Wheat
Council, NATO, OECD, UN., UNESCO, UPU, WEU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $243.9 billion (1977 est. in 1977 prices), $4,367 per
capita; 59.7% consumption, 18.1% investment, 21.4% gov-
ernment; 0.5% inventories, 0.2% net foreign balance, real
growth 1.5% (1976)
Agriculture: mixed farming predominates; main prod-
ucts-wheat, barley, potatoes, sugar beets, livestock, dairy
products; 52.2% self-sufficient; food shortages-meat, fruits,
vegetables, cereals, dairy products; caloric intake, 2,910
calories per day per capita, 1975
Fishing: catch 933,000 metric tons (1976), valued at $332
million; 1976 exports $146.2 million, imports $492.5 million
Major industries: machinery and transport equipment,
metals, food processing, paper and paper products, textiles,
chemicals, clothing
Shortages: rubber, timber and
nonferrous metals, foodstuffs
woodpulp, textile fibers,
Crude steel: 22.3 million metric tons produced (1976);
28.1 million metric tons capacity (1975), 400 kg per capita
Electric power: 83,800,000 kW capacity (1977); 280
billion kWh produced (1977), 5,010 kWh per capita
Exports: $57.5 billion (f.o.b., 1977); machinery, transport
equipment, chemicals, metals, nonmetallic mineral manu-
factures, textiles, beverages
Imports: $63.7 billion (f.o.b., 1977); foodstuffs, petroleum,
machinery, crude materials, chemicals, nonferrous metals
Major trade partners: 37.5% EC, 13.4% Commonwealth,
9.7% U.S., 4.2% Ireland, 3.9% Switzerland
Aid: donor: bilateral economic aid authorized (ODA and
OOF), $5,058 million (1970-76)
Budget (central government): forecasts for FY78, $75.67
billion expenditures, $65.67 billion revenues; central govern-
ment borrowing requirement, $11.93 billion; total public
sector borrowing requirement, $14.74 billion
Monetary conversion rate: pound sterling floating,
average daily exchange rate 1976, 0.55 pounds=US$1
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: Great Britain-18,287 km total; British Rail-
ways (BR) operates 18,012 km standard gage (1.435 m)
(3,735 km electrified, 11,410 km double track, 2,366 km
multiple track) and 19 km 0.597-meter gage; 256 km of
standard gage (1.435 m) and several narrow gages are
privately owned; Northern Ireland Railways (NIR) operates
327 km 1.600-meter gage, 190 km double track
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UNITED KINGDOM/UPPER VOLTA
Highways: approx. 343,315 km paved and 23,175 km in
Northern Ireland, 22,227 km paved; 949 km gravel
Inland waterways: 1,770 km of commercial routes
Pipelines: 933 km crude oil, almost all insignificant; 2,907
km refined products; 1,770 km natural gas
Ports: 23 major, 350 minor
Civil air: 506 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
in and 17 leased out)
Telecommunications: modern, efficient domestic and
international system; 22.4 million telephones (39.4 per 100
popl.); excellent countrywide broadcast; 97 AM, 120 FM,
and 300 TV stations; 42 submarine cables; 1 earth satellite
station with 2 Atlantic Ocean antennas and 1 Indian Ocean
antenna
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 12,715,000; 10,738,000
fit for military service; no conscription; 448,000 reach
military age (18) annually
Military budget: proposed for
March 1979, $13,353.7 million;
government budget
fiscal year
about 15%
UPPER VOLTA
ending 31
of central
LAND
274,540 km'; 50% pastureland, 21% fallow, 10% culti-
vated, 9% forest and scrub, 10% waste and other uses
Land boundaries: 3,307 km
PEOPLE
Population: 6,508,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 2.2% (current)
Nationality: noun-Upper Voltan(s); adjective-Upper
Voltan
Ethnic divisions: more than 50 tribes; principal tribe is
Mossi (about 2.5 million); other important groups are
Gurunsi, Senufo, Lobi, Bobo, Mande, and Fulani
Religion: majority of population animist, about 20%
Muslim, 5% Christian (mainly Catholic)
Language: French official; tribal languages belong
Sudanic family, spoken by 50% of the population
Literacy: 5%-10%
Labor force: about 95% of the economically active
population engaged in animal husbandry, subsistence farm-
ing, and related agricultural pursuits; about 30,000 are wage
earners; about 20% of male labor force migrates annually to
neighboring countries for seasonal employment
Organized labor: 4 principal trade union
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Upper Volta
Type: republic; military regime in power since January
1966
Capital: Ouagadougou
Political subdivisions: 10 departments, composed of 44
cercles, headed by civilian prefects
Legal system: based on French civil law system and
customary law; constitution adopted 1970, suspended
February 1974; a national referendum on a draft constitu-
tion held in November 1977 and country to return to civilian
rule with legislative and presidential elections in 1978; has
not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Proclamation of the Republic, 11
December
Branches: President is an army officer; 57-man National
Assembly was elected 30 April 1978
Government leader: Gen. Sangoule Lamizana, President
and Prime Minister
Suffrage: universal for adults
Elections: Parliamentary elections held on 30 April 1978
and Presidential elections on 14 May
Political parties and leaders: 3 parties elected to seats in
the National Assembly: Voltan Democratic Union (UDV)
holds the majority of seats; National Union for the Defense
of Democracy (UNDD); Voltan Progressive Union (UPV)
Communists: no Communist party; some sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: labor organizations
are badly splintered, students and teachers occasionally
strike
Member of: AFDB, CEAO, EAMA, ECA, EIB (associate),
Entente, FAO, G-77, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, IPU,
ITU, NAM, Niger River Commission, OAU, OCAM, U.N.,
UNESCO, UPU, WCL, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $644 million (1976 est.), $110 per capita, annual
growth estimated by U.S. Embassy at 4.6% (1973-76)
Agriculture: cash crops-peanuts, shea nuts, sesame,
cotton; food crops-sorghum, millet, corn, rice; livestock;
largely self-sufficient
Fishing: catch 3,500 metric tons (1975)
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Major industries: agricultural processing plants, brewery,
bottling, and brick plants; a few other light industries
Electric power: 21,500 kW capacity (1977); 57 million
kWh produced (1977), 9 kWh per capita
Exports: $83 million (f.o.b., 1976); livestock (on the hoof),
peanuts, shea nut products, cotton, sesame
Imports: $182 million (c.i.f., 1976); textiles, food, and
other consumer goods, transport equipment, machinery,
fuels
Major trade partners: Ivory Coast and Ghana; overseas
trade mainly with France and other EC countries;
preferential tariff to EC and franc zone countries
Aid: economic-France (1964-September 1970), $46
million; EC (FY1960-72), $87 million; U.S.S.R., China,
Ghana, West Germany, and Israel have also extended aid;
U.S. (FY61-76), $53 million; international organizations
(FY60-73), $175 million; China, $51 million (1973-76);
military-France, $3.7 million (1964-70); U.S., $0.1 million
(FY 1962-76)
Budget: (1978) balanced at $125 million
Monetary conversion rate: about 242.69 Communaute
Financiere Africaine francs=US$1 as of November 1977
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 1,173 km, 516 km meter gage (1.00 m), single
track; Ouagadougou to Abidjan, Ivory Coast line
Highways: approximately 16,320 km total; 520 km paved,
3,600 km improved, 12,200 km unimproved
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 55 total, 54 usable; 2 with permanent-surface
runways; 2 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 3 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: all services generally poor; 3,400
telephones (0.1 per 100 pop].); 3 AM stations, 1 FM station,
and I TV station; 1 Atlantic Ocean Comsat station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,478,000; 739,000 fit
for military service; no conscription
Supply: mainly dependent on France
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1976, $18,243,900; 19.7% of central government budget
URUGUAY
LAND
186,998 km2; 84% agricultural land (73% pasture, 11%
cropland), 16% forest, urban, waste and other
Land boundaries: 1,352 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 200 nm (fishing
200 nm)
Coastline: 660 km
PEOPLE
Population: 2,893,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 0.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Uruguayan(s); adjective-Uruguayan
Ethnic divisions: 85%-90% white, 5% Negro, 5%-10%
mestizo
Religion: 66% Roman Catholic (less
population attends church regularly)
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 90.5% for those 15 years of age or
Labor force: 1,015,500 (1963 census); of those employed
in important sectors-25% government; 34% industry; 10%
service; 23% other; 8% agriculture, forestry, fishing and
mining; no shortage of skilled labor
Organized labor: about 25% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Oriental Republic of Uruguay
Type: republic,
influence
government under
Capital: Montevideo
Political subdivisions:
autonomy
19 departments with limited
Legal system: based on Spanish civil law system; new
constitution implemented 1967; judicial review of legislative
acts in Supreme Court; legal education at University of the
Republic at Montevideo; accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 25 August
Branches: executive, headed by President; since 1973 the
military has had considerable influence in policymaking;
bicameral legislature (closed indefinitely by presidential
decree in June 1973), Council of State set up to act as
legislature; national judiciary headed by Supreme Court
Government
Manfredini
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: projected for 1980
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URUGUAY/VATICAN CITY
Political parties and leaders: political activities are
proscribed
Voting strength (1971 elections): 40.8% Colorado, 40.1%
Blanco, 18.6% Frente Amplio, 0.5% Radical Christian Union
Communists: 35,000-40,000 including Communist youth
group and sympathizers
Other political or pressure groups: Communist Party
(PCU), Rodney Arismendi (in exile in the U.S.S.R.);
Christian Democratic Party (PDC); Socialist Party of
Uruguay (PSU); Revolutionary Movement of Uruguay
(MRO) pro-Cuban Communist Party; National Liberation
Movement (MLN-Tupamaros) Marxist revolutionary terror-
ist group
Member of: FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, IDB, IFC, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ITU, LAFTA, OAS,
SELA, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $3.0 billion (1976), $1,080 per capita; 83% private
consumption, 12% public consumption, 11% gross invest-
ment; real growth rate 1976, 2.6%
Agriculture: large areas devoted to extensive livestock
grazing (17 million sheep, 11 million cattle); main crops-
wheat, rice, corn; self-sufficient in most basic foodstuffs;
caloi4c intake, 3,000 calories per day per capita, with high
protein content
Major industries: meat processing, wool and hides,
textiles, footwear, cement, petroleum refining
Crude steel: rolled products 34,841 metric tons produced,
castings 263 metric tons (1976)
Electric power: 700,000 kW capacity (1977); 3 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,070 kWh per capita
Exports: $608 million (f.o.b., 1977); wool, hides
Imports: $721 million (c.i.f., 1977); fuels, metals, machin-
ery, transportation equipment
Major trade partners: exports-34% EC, 7% U.S., 29%
LAFTA; imports-29% LAFTA, 10% U.S., 20% EC (1975)
Aid: economic-extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $129
million in loans, $30 million in grants; from other Western
countries (1960-74), $26 million; from Communist coun-
tries-U.S.S.R. (1969-76), $52 million and Eastern Europe
(1966-76), $31 million; from international organizations
(1946-76), $371 million; military-authorizations from U.S.
(FY53-75), $90 million
Budget: (1977 est.) revenue, $623 million; expenditure,
$671 million
Monetary conversion rate: 5.46 pesos=US$1 (January
1978)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,795 km, all standard gage (1.435 m) and
government owned
Highways: 15,700 km total; 10,000 km paved, 2,700 km
gravel, 3,000 km improved earth
Inland waterways: 1,600 km; used by coastal and
shallow-draft river craft
Freight carried: highways 80% of total cargo traffic, rail
15%, waterways 5%
Ports: 4 major (Montevideo, Colonia, Fray Bentos,
Paysandu), 6 minor
Civil air: 10 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 101 total, 63 usable; 10 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway 2,440-3,659 m, 11 with runways
1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: most modern facilities concen-
trated in Montevideo; 258,000 telephones (9.0 per 100 popl.);
85 AM, 3 FM, and 27 TV stations; 2 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 672,000; 542,000 fit for
military service; no conscription
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1977, $79.9 million; 17.3% of central government
budget
VATICAN CITY
LAND
0.438 km2
Land boundaries: 3 km
PEOPLE
Population: 1,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1976)
Ethnic divisions: primarily Italians but also many other
nationalities
Religion: Roman Catholic
Language: Italian, Latin, and various modern languages
Literacy: virtually complete
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VATICAN CITY/VENEZUELA
Labor force: approx. 700; Vatican City employees
divided into 3 categories-executives, officeworkers, and
salaried employees
Organized labor: none
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: State of the Vatican City
Type: monarchical-sacerdotal state
Capital: Vatican City
Political subdivisions: Vatican City includes St. Peter's,
the Vatican Palace and Museum and neighboring buildings
covering more than 13 acres; 13 buildings in Rome although
Electric power: obtained from Rome city grid; standby
diesel powerplant with 2,100 kW capacity (1977)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: none (city streets)
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: none
Telecommunications: 3 AM stations and
2,000-line automatic telephone exchange
outside the boundaries, enjoy extraterritorial rights DEFENSE FORCES
Legal system: Canon law; constitutional laws of 1929
serve some of the functions of a constitution
National holiday: 30 June
Branches: the Pope possesses full executive, legislative,
and judicial powers; he delegates these powers to the
governor of Vatican City, who is subject to pontifical
appointment and recall; high Vatican offices include the
Secretariat of State, the College of Cardinals (chief papal
advisers), the Roman Curia (which carries on the central
administration of the Roman Catholic Church), the Presi-
dence of the Prefecture for the Economy, and the synod of
bishops (created in 1965)
Government leader: Supreme Pontiff, Paul VI (Giovanni
Battista Montini, born 26 September 1897, elected Pope 21
June 1963)
Suffrage: limited to cardinals less than 80 in age
Elections: Supreme Pontiff elected for life by College of
Cardinals
Communists: none known
Other political or pressure groups: none (exclusive of
influence exercised by other church officers in universal
Roman Catholic Church)
Member: IAEA, IWC-International Wheat Council,
U.N. (permanent observer)
ECONOMY
The Vatican City, seat of the Holy See, is supported
financially by contributions (known as Peter's pence) from
Roman Catholics throughout the world; some income
derived from sale of Vatican postage stamps and tourist
mementos, fees for admission to Vatican museums, and sale
of publications; industrial activity consists solely of printing
and production of a small amount of mosaics and staff
uniforms
The banking and financial activities of the Vatican are
worldwide; the Institute for Religious Agencies carries out
fiscal operations and invests and transfers funds of Roman
Catholic religious communities throughout the world; the
Cardinal's Commission controls the administration of ordi-
nary assets of the Holy See and a Special Administration
manages the Holy See's capital assets
Defense is responsibility of Italy
VENEZUELA
LAND
911,680 km2; 4% cropland, 18% pasture, 21% forest, 57%
urban, waste, and other
Land boundaries: 4,181 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 2,800 km
PEOPLE
Population: 14,058,000, excluding Indian jungle popula-
tion (July 1978), average annual growth rate 3.3% (current)
Nationality:
zuelan
noun-Venezuelan(s); adjective-Vene-
Ethnic divisions: 67% mestizo, 21% white, 10% Negro,
2% Indian
Religion: 94% nominally Roman Catholic
Language: Spanish
Literacy: 74% (claimed, 1970 est.)
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July 1978
Labor force: 3.7 million (1975); 24% agriculture, 6%
construction, 17% manufacturing, 6% transportation, 18%
commerce, 25% services, 4% petroleum, utilities, and other
Organized labor: 45% of labor force
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Venezuela
Type: republic
Capital: Caracas
Political subdivisions: 20 states, 1 federal district, 2
federal territories
Legal system: based on Spanish civil law system with
influence of U.S. law; constitution promulgated 1961;
judicial review of legislative acts in Cassation Court only;
dual court system, state and federal; legal education at
Central University of Venezuela; has not accepted compul-
sory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 5 July
Branches: executive (President), bicameral legislature,
judiciary
Government leader: President Carlos Andres Perez
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: every 5 years; next to be held December 1978
Political parties and leaders: Accion Democratica (AD),
Carlos Andres Perez, Luis Pinerva Ordaz, and Gonzalo
Barrios; Social Christian Party (COPEI), Rafael Caldera and
Luis Herrera Campins; People's Electoral Movement (MEP),
Jesus Angel Paz Galarraga; Partido Comunista de Venezuela
(PCV), Secretary-General Jesus Faria; Movement to Social-
ism (MAS), Teodoro Petkoff and Pompey Marquez
Voting strength (1973 election): 49% AD, 37% COPEI,
5% New Force (MEP & PCV), 4% MAS, 3% URD, 2% others
Communists: 4,000-6,000 members (est.)
Other political or pressure groups: Fedecamaras (a
conservative business group); PRO VENEZUELA (leftist,
nationalist economic group); DESARROLLISTAS (group of
wealthy, independent businessmen led by former finance
minister Pedro Tinoco and historian Guillermo Moron)
Member of: Andean Pact, AIOEC, FAO, G-77, IADB,
IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDB, IFC, IHO, ILO, IMF, IPU, ITU,
IWC-International Wheat Council, LAFTA, NAMUCAR
(Caribbean Multinational Shipping Line-Naviera Multina-
cional del Caribe), OAS, OPEC, SELA, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $36.0 billion (1977, in 1977 dollars), $2,800 per
capita; 48% private consumption, 15% public consumption,
31% gross investment, 6% foreign sector (1976), real growth
rate 6.4% (1974-77)
Agriculture: main crops-sugarcane, corn, coffee, rice;
imports wheat (U.S.), corn (South Africa), sorghum (Argen-
tina, U.S.); caloric intake 2,600 calories per day per capita
(1972)
Fishing: catch 146,000 metric tons (1976); exports $28.4
million (1976), imports $2.0 million (1976)
Major industries: petroleum, iron-ore mining, construc-
tion, food processing, textiles
Crude steel: 750,000 metric tons produced (1976), 60 kg
per capita
Electric power: 6,170,000 kW capacity (1977); 25 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,935 kWh per capita
Exports: $9.8 billion (f.o.b., 1977); petroleum $9.1 billion,
iron ore, coffee
Imports: $8.8 billion (f.o.b., 1977); industrial machinery
and equipment, chemicals, manufactures, wheat
Major trade partners: imports-40% U.S., 10% Japan,
10% West Germany; exports-33% U.S., 13% Canada
Aid: economic assistance-extensions from U.S.
(FY46-76), $128 million loans; $73 million grants; from
international organizations (FY46-75), $658 million; from
Communist countries (1954-76), $10 million; military-
assistance from U.S. (FY46-76), $153 million
Budget: 1977-revenues $9.0 billion; expenditures, $11.4
billion, capital $4.2 billion
Monetary conversion rate: 4.2925 bolivares=US$1 (sell-
ing rate)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 373 km standard gage (1.435 m) all single
track; 171 km government owned, 202 km privately owned
Highways: 58,600 km total; 21,200 km paved, 22,800 km
gravel, 14,600 km improved earth
Inland waterways: 7,100 km; Orinoco River and Lake
Maracaibo accept oceangoing vessels
Pipelines: 6,110 km crude oil; 400 km refined products;
2,495 km natural gas
Ports: 6 major, 17 minor
Civil air: 70 major transport aircraft (including 4 leased
in)
Airfields: 292 total, 261 usable; 110 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 9 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 76 with
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
Telecommunications: modern expanding telecom system;
satellite ground station; 649,000 telephones (5.3 per 100
pop].); 157 AM, 50 FM, and 43 TV stations; 2 submarine
cables; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,707,000; 1,911,000 fit
for military service; 138,000 reach military age (18) annually
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, $614.3 million; about 5.9% of central
government budget
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LAND
329,707 km2; 14% cultivated, 50% forested, 36% urban
inland water, and other
Land boundaries: 4,562 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 3,444 km (excluding islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 51,226,000 (July
growth rate 2.6% (current)
Nationality: noun-Vietnamese (sing. &
Vietnamese
Ethnic divisions: 85%-90% predominantly Vietnamese;
3% Chinese; ethnic minorities include Muong, Thai, Meo,
Khmer, Man, Cham, and mountain tribesman
Religion: Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Catholicism,
Animism, Islam, and Protestantism
Language: Vietnamese, French, Chinese, English, Khmer,
tribal languages (Mon-Khmer and Malayo-Polynesian)
Labor force: approximately 15 million, not including
military; about 70% agriculture and 8% industry
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Socialist Republic of
Type: Communist state
Capital: Hanoi
Political subdivisions: 38 provinces
Legal system: based on Communist legal
French civil law system
National holiday: 2 September
Branches: constitution provides for a National Assembly
and highly centralized executive nominally subordinate to it
Party and government leaders: Ton Due Thang, Presi-
dent of DRV; Le Duan, Party Secretary General; Truong
Chinh, Chairman, Standing Committee of National Assem-
bly; Pham Van Dong, Premier; Vo Nguyen Giap, Minister of
National Defense; Nguyen Duy Trinh, Minister for Foreign
Affairs; Tran Quoc Hoan, Minister of Interior
Suffrage: over age 18
Elections: pro forma elections held for national and local
assemblies; lastest election for National Assembly held on
April 25, 1976
Political parties: National United Front, consisting of the
predominate Vietnam Communist Party, successor to the
Vietnam Workers Party and several other political
organizations
Member of: ADB, Colombo Plan, ESCAP, FAO, G-77,
IBRD, ICAO, IMF, Mekong Committee, NAM, U.N. UNDP,
UNESCO, UNICEF, WHO, WIPO
ECONOMY
GNP: $7.3 billion (1977), approximately $145 per capita;
real growth less than 5% annually
Agriculture: main crops-rice, rubber, fruits and vegeta-
bles, mainly in the south; some corn, manioc, and sugarcane;
major food imports-wheat, dairy products
Fishing: catch 776,000 metric tons (1976), of which
600,000 metric tons sea
Major industries: food processing, textiles, machine
building, mining, cement, chemical fertilizer, glass, tires
Shortages: foodgrains, petroleum, capital goods and
machinery, fertilizer
Electric power: 1,342,700 kW capacity (1977); 3.4 billion
kWh produced (1977), 65 kWh per capita
Exports: $300 million (1977); agricultural and handicraft
products, coal, minerals, ores
Imports: $900 million (1977); petroleum, steel products,
railroad equipment, chemicals, medicines, raw cotton,
fertilizer, grain
Major trade partners: exports-U.S.S.R., East European
countries, Japan, other Asian markets; imports-U.S.S.R.,
East Europe, China, Japan
Aid: accurate data on aid since April 1975 unification
unavailable; estimated annual commitments of economic aid
are-U.S.S.R., $500 million; East European countries, $350
million; China, $350 million; non-Communist countries,
$100 million; international institutions, $50 million; military
aid deliveries since end of war in April 1975 are minimal
Monetary conversion rate (official): 2.65 northern
dons=US$1; 1.85 southern dong=US$1 (internally), 1
northern dong=0.8 southern dong (November 1977)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 41,190 km total; 5,471 km bituminous, 27,030
km gravel or improved earth, 8,690 km unimproved earth
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VIETNAM/WALLIS AND FUTUNA/WESTERN SAHARA
Inland waterways: about 17,072 km navigable; more than
5,149 km navigable at all times by vessels up to 1.8-m draft
Ports: 9 major, 23 minor
Civil air: military controlled
Airfields: 172 total, 139 usable; 59 with
surface runways; 8 with runways 2,440-3,659
runways 1,220-2,439 m; 2 seaplane stations
DEFENSE FORCES
permanent-
m, 18 with
Supply: dependent on the U.S.S.R., Eastern European
Communist countries, and the PRC for virtually all new
equipment; produces negligible quantities of infantry
weapons, ammunition and explosive devices (Vietnam
possesses a huge inventory of U.S.-manufactured weapons
and equipment captured from the RVN)
Military budget: no expenditure estimates are available;
military aid from the U.S.S.R. and PRC has been so
extensive that actual allocation of Vietnam's domestic
resources to defense has not been indicative of total military
effort
NOTE: VN figures preliminary
WALLIS AND FUTUNA
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Territory of the Wallis and Futuna
Type: overseas territory of France
Capital: Matu Utu
Political subdivisions: 3 districts
Branches: territorial assembly of 20 members; popular
election of one
one Senator
deputy to National Assembly in Paris, and
Government leader: Superior
Agostini
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: every 5 years
~? o
FIJI,
0
WALLIS
AND FUTUNA
WESTERN SAHARA
(formerly Spanish Sahara)
LAND
About 207 km2
WATER
Limits of territorial waters: 12 nm
Coastline: about 129 km
PEOPLE
Population: 9,000 (official estimate for 1 July 1973)
Nationality: noun-Wallisian(s), Futunan(s), or Wallis
and Futuna Islander; adjective-Wallisian, Futunan, or
Wallis and Futuna Islanders
Ethnic divisions: almost entirely Polynesian
Religion: largely Roman Catholic
Atlantic Ocean
ECONOMY
Agriculture: dominated by coconut production with
subsistence crops of yams, taro, bananas
Exports: negligible
Imports: $1.4 million (1972); largely foodstuffs and some
equipment associated with development programs
Monetary conversion rate: 70 Colonial Franc Pacifique
(CFP)=US$1
COMMUNICATIONS
Highways: 100 km of improved road on Uvea Island
(1972)
Ports: 2 minor
Airfields: 2 total, 2 usable; 1 with runway 1,220-2,439 in
Telecommunications: 85 telephones (0.9 per 100 pop].)
DEFENSE
No formal defense structure; no regular Armed Forces
CANARY
ISLANDS
WESTERN
SAHARA
MA Itt IIA
LAND
266,770 km2, nearly all desert
Land boundaries: 2,086 km
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WESTERN SAHARA/WESTERN SAMOA
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 6 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 1,110 km
PEOPLE
Population: 75,000 (census of 1974)
Nationality: noun-Saharan(s); adjective-Saharan
Ethnic divisions: Arab, Berber, and Negro nomads
Religion: Muslim
Language: Hassaniya Arabic
Literacy: among Spanish, probably nearly 100%; among
nomads, perhaps 5%
Labor force: 12,000; 50% animal husbandry and subsist-
ence farming, 50% other
Organized labor: none
GOVERNMENT
Type: legal status of territory and question of sovereignty
unresolved; territory partitioned between Morocco and
Mauritania in April 1976, with Morocco acquiring the
Northern two-thirds including the rich phosphate reserves at
Bu Craa; both countries have established political adminis-
tration within their own zones of influence; the line of
partition begins at a point on the coast where the Atlantic
Ocean intersects the 24th parallel, and extends in a
southeasterly direction to the point where the 23d parallel
intersects the 13th meridian
ECONOMY
Agriculture: practically none; some barley is grown in
nondrought years; fruit and vegetables in the few oases; food
imports are essential; camels, sheep, and goats are kept by
the nomadic natives; cash economy exists largely for the
garrison forces
Major industries: phosphate mining, fishing, and
handicrafts
Shortages: water
Electric power: 4,000 kW capacity (1975); 9 million kWh
produced (1975), 84 kWh per capita
Exports: in 1975, up to $75 million in phosphates, all other
exports valued at under $1 million
Imports: $1,443,000 (1968); fuel for fishing fleet,
foodstuffs
Major trade partners: monetary trade largely with Spain
and Spanish possessions
Aid: small amounts from Spain in prior years
Monetary conversion rate: see Moroccan and Mauritan-
ian currencies
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 6,100 km total; 500 km bituminous treated,
5,600 km unimproved earth roads and tracks
Ports: 2 major (El Aaiun, Villa Cisneros), 2 minor
Civil air: no major transport aircraft
Airfields: 12 total, 11 usable; 3 with permanent-surface
runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m; 5 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: telephone and telegraph poor;
1,000 telephones (0.7 per 100 pop1.); 2 AM, no FM, 5 TV
stations
WESTERN SAMOA
? WESTERN
? SAMOA
LAND
2,849 km2; comprised of 2 large islands of Savai'i and
Upolu and several smaller islands, including Manono and
Apolima; 65% forested, 24% cultivated, 11% industry, waste,
or urban
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 403 km
PEOPLE
Population: 155,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.0% (1-76 to 1-77)
Nationality: noun-Western Samoan(s); adjective-West-
ern Samoa
Ethnic divisions: Polynesians, about 12,000 Euronesians
(persons of European and Polynesian blood), 700 Europeans
Religion: 99.7% Christian (about half of population
associated with the London Missionary Society)
Language: Samoan (Polynesian), English
Literacy: 85%-90% (education compulsory for all children
from 7-15 years)
Labor force: agriculture 19,148; mining and manufactur-
ing 1,716 (1961)
Organized labor: unorganized
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GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Independent State of Western Samoa
Type: constitutional monarchy under native chief; special
treaty relationship with New Zealand
Capital: Apia
Legal system: based on English common law and local
customs; constitution came into effect upon independence in
1962; judicial review of legislative acts with respect to
fundamental rights of the citizen; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 1 January
Branches: Head of State and Executive Council; Legisla-
tive Assembly; Supreme Court, Court of Appeal, Land and
Titles Court, village courts
Government leaders: Head of State, Malietoa Tanumafili
II; Prime Minister, Tupuola Efi
Suffrage: 45 Samoan members of Legislative Assembly
are elected by holders of matai (heads of family) titles (about
5,000); 2 European members are elected by universal adult
suffrage
Elections: held triennially, last in February 1976
Political parties and leaders: no clearly defined political
party structure
Communists: unknown
Member of: ADB, Commonwealth, ESCAP, G-77, IBRD,
IFC, IMF, U.N., WHO
ECONOMY
GNP: $45 million (1974), $290 per capita
Agriculture: cocoa, bananas, copra; staple foods include
coconut, bananas, taro, and yams
Electric power: 9,000 kW capacity (1977); 27 million
kWh produced (1977), 180 kWh per capita
Exports: $15 million (f.o.b., 1977); copra 38%, cocoa 26%,
timber 3%
Imports: $38 million (c.i.f., 1977); food, manufactured
goods, machinery
Major trade partners: exports-37% New Zealand, 7%
Netherlands, 36% West Germany, 8% U.S.; imports-28%
New Zealand, 20% Australia, 15% Japan, 13% U.S.
Aid: New Zealand, $7 million (est. 1972-76)
Budget: 1976 est., revenues and grants $34 million,
expenditures $46 million
Monetary conversion rate: WS Tala=US$1.3391 (Janu-
ary 1978), 0.75 WS Tala=US$1
Major industries: timber, tourism
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 784 km total; 375 km bituminous, remainder
mostly gravel, crushed stone, or earth
Inland waterways: none
Ports: 1 principal (Apia), 1 minor
Civil air: 2 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 4 total, all usable; 1 with permanent-surface
runway 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: 3,300 telephones (2.2 per 100
pop,.); 20,000 radio receivers; 2 AM stations
YEMEN (ADEN)
LAND
287,490 km'; (border with Saudi Arabia undefined); only
about 1% arable (of which less than 25% cultivated)
Land boundaries: 1,802 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
PEOPLE
Population: 1,851,000, excluding the islands of Perim and
Kamaran for which no data are available (July 1978),
average annual growth rate 3.0% (5-73 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Yemeni(s); adjective-Yemeni
Ethnic divisions: almost all Arabs; a few Indians, Somalis,
and Europeans in Aden
Religion: Muslim
Language: Arabic
Literacy: probably no higher than 10%; Aden 35% (est.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: People's Democratic Republic of Yemen
Type: republic; power centered in ruling Unified National
Front Party
Capital: Aden; Madinat ash Sha'b, administrative capital
Political subdivisions: 6 provinces
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YEMEN (ADEN)/YEMEN (SANA)
Legal system: based on Islamic law (for personal matters)
and English common law (for commercial matters); highest
judicial organ, Federal High Court, interprets constitution
and determines disputes between states
National holiday: 14 October
Branches: Presidential Council; cabinet; Supreme Peo-
ple's Council
Government leaders: Chairman of Presidential Council,
Salim Rubayyi Ali; Prime Minister Ali Nasir Muhammed
al-Hasani; NF Secretary General Abd Al-Fattah Ismail
Suffrage: granted by constitution to all citizens 18 and
over
Elections: elections for legislative body, Supreme People's
Council, called for in constitution; none have been held
Political parties and leaders: Unified National Front
(NF), the only legal party, is coalition of National Front,
Baath, and Communist parties
Communists: unknown number
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto),
IBRD, ICAO, IDA, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $490 million (1976 est.), $280 per capita
Agriculture (all outside Aden): cotton is main cash crop;
cereals, dates, kat (qat), coffee, and livestock are raised and
there is a growing fishing industry; large amount of food
must be imported (particularly for Aden); cotton, hides,
skins, dried and salted fish are exported
Major industries: petroleum refinery (production 150,000
b/d) mid-1971; capacity 178,000 b/d at Little Aden operates
on imported crude; oil exploration activity
Electric power: 95,000 kW capacity (1977); 210 million
kWh produced (1977), 115 kWh per capita
Exports: $36 million (1976 provisional), excluding petro-
leum products but including re-exports
Imports: $274 million (1976 provisional)
Major trade partners: Yemen, East Africa, but some
cement and sugar imported from Communist countries;
crude oil imported from Persian Gulf, exported mainly to
U.K. and Japan
Budget: (FY1974-75, est.)-revenues $42 million, expen-
ditures $75 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 S. Yemeni dinar=US$2.90
Fiscal year: 1 April - 31 March
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 5,311 km total; 322 km bituminous treated,
290 km crushed stone and gravel, 4,699 km motorable track
Ports: 1 major (Aden)
Pipelines: refined products, 32 km
Civil air: 7 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 94 total, 56 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 4 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 31 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: small system of open-wire line,
multiconductor cable, and radiocommunications stations;
only center Aden; 9,900 telephones (0.6 per 100 popl.); 1
AM, no FM and 3 TV stations; 2 submarine cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 422,000; 233,000 fit for
military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1978, $58,000,000; about 16% of central government budget
YEMEN (SANA)
Red =
YE N Arabian
Indian
Ocean
LAND
194,250 km2 (parts of border with Saudi Arabia and
Southern Yemen undefined); 20% agricultural, 1% forested,
79% desert, waste, or urban
Land boundaries: 1,528 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm (plus 6 nm
"necessary supervision zone")
Coastline: 523 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,031,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 1.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Yemeni(s); adjective-Yemeni
Ethnic divisions: 90% Arab, 10% Afro-Arab (mixed)
Religion: 100% Muslim
Language: Arabic
Literacy: 15% (est.)
Labor force: almost entirely agriculture and herding
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GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Yemen Arab Republic
Type: republic; military regime assumed
1974
Capital: Sana
Political subdivisions: 8 provinces
YEMEN (SANA)/YUGOSLAVIA
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Yemeni rial=US$0.22 as of
October 1973
Legal system: based on Turkish law, Islamic
local customary law; first constitution
December 1970, suspended June 1974; has
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Proclamation
September
Branches: Military Command
cabinet; People's Assembly
law, and
promulgated
Government leaders: Head of Military Command Coun-
cil, Lt. Col. Ahmad Ghashmi; Prime Minister Abd al-Aziz
Abd al-Ghani
Communists: small number
Political parties or pressure groups: Yemeni Union, a
small inactive government party formed in February 1973;
conservative tribal groups, some Muslim Brotherhood
followers, leftist sentiment represented by pro-Iraqi Baath-
ists, Nasirists, small clandestine groups supported by Yemen
(Aden)
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, IBRD, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, ILO, IMF, ITU, NAM, U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $1,600 million (1976 est.), $240 per capita
Agriculture: sorghum and millet, qat (a mild narcotic),
cotton, coffee, fruits and vegetables; largely self-sufficient in
food
Major industries: cotton textiles and leather goods
produced on a small scale; handicraft and some fishing;
small aluminum products factory
Electric power: 48,590 kW capacity (1977); 100 million
kWh produced (1977), 20 kWh per capita
Exports: $15 million (1976 est.); qat, cotton, coffee, hides,
vegetables
Imports: $475 million (1976 est.); textiles and other
manufactured consumer goods, petroleum products, sugar,
grain, flour, other foodstuffs, and cement
Major trade partners: China, Yemen (Aden), U.S.S.R.,
Japan, U.K., Australia, Saudi Arabia
Aid: bilateral pledges received-$167 million 1974,
multilateral-$36 million through 1972, $170 million drawn
through 1970; major donors include U.S.S.R., China, U.S.,
West Germany, Saudi Arabia; military-$114 million from
U.S.S.R.; $37 million from Eastern Europe; $7 million
Western military aid through 1973
Budget: (1974/75 est.) $711 million expenditures
Fiscal year: 1 July-30 June
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 3,477 km total; 467 km bituminous; 435 km
crushed stone and gravel; 2,575 km earth, sand, and light
gravel
Ports: 1 major (Al Hudaydah), 2 minor
Civil air: 14 major transport aircraft (including 2 leased
in)
Airfields: 27 total, 15 usable; 4 with permanent-surface
runways; 4 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 5 with runways
1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: system inadequate; consists of
meager open-wire lines and low-power radiocommunication
stations; principal center Sana, secondary centers Al
Hudaydah and Taizz; 4,600 telephones (0.1 per 100 popl.); 2
AM stations, no FM, 1 TV station; 1 Indian Ocean satellite
station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,622,000; 895,000 fit
for military service; about 72,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1975,
$50,402,000; 54.6% of central government budget
YUGOSLAVIA
LAND
255,892 km2; 32% arable, 25% meadows and pastures, 34%
forested, 9% other
Land boundaries: 3,001 km
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WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 10 nm (fishing 12
nm)
Coastline: 1,521 km (mainland), plus 2,414 km (offshore
islands)
PEOPLE
Population: 21,973,000 (July
growth rate 0.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Yugoslav(s); adjective-Yugoslav
Ethnic divisions: 39.7% Serb, 22.1% Croat, 8.4% Muslims,
8.2% Slovene, 5.8% Macedonian, 2.5% Montenegrin, 6.4%
Albanian, 2.3% Hungarian, 4.6% other (1971 census)
Religion: 41% Serbian Orthodox, 32% Roman Catholic,
12% Muslim, 3% other, 12% none (1953 census)
Language: Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, Macedonian,
nian, Hungarian, and Italian
Literacy: 80.3% (1961)
Labor force: 9.2 million (1976); 36% agriculture, 20%
mining and manufacturing, 44% other nonagricultural
activities; estimated unemployment averaged 5% of domes-
tic labor force in 1976
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Type: Communist state, federal republic in form
Capital: Belgrade
Political subdivisions: 6 republics with 2 autonomous
provinces (within the Republic of Serbia)
Legal system: mixture of civil law system and Communist
legal theory; constitution adopted 1974; legal education at
several law schools; has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
National holiday: Proclamation of the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia, 29 November
Branches: parliament (Federal Assembly) constitutionally
supreme; executive includes cabinet (Federal Executive
Council) and the federal administration; judiciary; the State
Presidency is a collective policymaking body composed of a
representative from each republic and province, Tito
presides as President of the Republic
Government leader: Josip Broz Tito, President of
Republic and President of League of Communists of
Yugoslavia
Suffrage: universal over age 18
Elections: Federal Assembly elected every
complicated, indirect system of voting
Political parties and leaders: League of Communists of
Yugoslavia (LCY) only; leaders are President Tito and
influential presidium members Edvard Kardelj, Vladimir
Bakaric, and Stane Dolanc
Communists: 1,629,082 party members (December 1977)
.
Other political or pressure groups: Socialist Alliance of
Working People of Yugoslavia (SAWPY), the major mass
front organization for the LCY; Confederation of 't'rade
Unions of Yugoslavia (CTUY), Union of Youth of Yugoslavia
(UYY), Federation of Yugoslav War Veterans (SUBNOR)
Member of: ASSIMER, CEMA (observer but participates
in certain commissions), EC (5-year non-preferential trade
agreement signed in May 1973 currently being renegoti-
ated), FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO,
IDA, IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study
Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, NAM, OECD
(participant in some activities), U.N., UNESCO, UPU,
WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $48.0 billion (1977 est., at 1977 prices), $2,195 per
capita; real growth rate 5.7% (1971-77)
Agriculture: diversified agriculture with many small
private holdings and large agricultural combines; main
crops-corn, wheat, tobacco, sugar beets, and sunflowers;
occasionally a net exporter of foodstuffs and live animals;
imports tropical products, cotton, wool, and vegetable meal
feeds; caloric intake, 3,539 calories per day per capita (1975)
Major industries: metallurgy, machinery and equipment,
oil refining, chemicals, textiles, wood processing, food
processing
Shortages: electricity, fuels, steel
Crude steel: 3.2 million metric tons produced (1977), 146
kg per capita
Electric power: 10,800,000 kW capacity (1977); 48.6
billion kWh produced (1977), 2,225 kWh per capita
Exports: $5.25 billion (f.o.b., 1977); 32% machinery and
equipment; 23% intermediate goods; 45% other
Imports: $9.63 billion (c.i.f., 1977); 23% raw materials,
fuels; 35% machinery and equipment; 18% intermediate
goods; 24% other goods
Major trade partners: 67% non-Communist countries (6%
U.S., 44% other developed Western countries), 35% Commu-
nist countries
Aid: Yugoslav outstanding external debt (medium/long-
term) end 1976, $7 billion, of which $2.7 billion official,
largely non-Communist (U.S. $350 million, FRG $400
million, U.S.S.R. $200 million, IBRD $560 million end 1975);
Yugoslavia has extended aid totalling about $1.2 billion
(outstanding in 1976) to developing countries, largely since
the late 1960's
Monetary conversion rate: (official) 17.0 new dinars=
US$1
Fiscal year: same as calendar year (all data refer to
calendar year or to middle or end of calendar year as
indicated)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 9,967 km total; 9,619 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 348 km narrow gage; 793 double track; 2,649 km
electrified (1976)
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YUGOSLAVIA /ZAIRE
Highways: 101,607 km total; 41,018 km asphalt, concrete,
stone block; 35,980 km asphalt treated, gravel, crushed stone;
24,609 km earth (1976)
Inland waterways: 2,001 km (1977)
Freight carried: rail-73.7 million metric tons, 21.0
billion metric ton/km (1976); highway-84.1 million metric
tons, 11.2 billion metric ton/km (1976); waterway-29.0
million metric tons, 7.7 billion metric ton/km (incl. int'l.
transit traffic) in approximately 1,225 waterway craft with
703,600 metric ton capacity
Pipelines: 623 km crude oil; 1,860 km natural gas
Ports: 9 major (most important: Rijeka, Split, Koper, Bar,
and Ploce), 24 minor (1978)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military budget (announced): for fiscal year ending 31
December 1978, 42.7 billion dinars; about 4.7% of Gross
Social Product (Yugoslavia's measure of production)
Atlantic
Ocean
ZAIRE
Kinshasa
LAND
2,343,950 km2; 22% agricultural land (1% cultivated), 45%
forested, 33% other
Land boundaries: 9,902 km
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 12 nm
Coastline: 37 km
PEOPLE
Population: 27,080,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 2.9% (current)
Nationality: noun-Zairian(s); adjective-Zairian
Ethnic divisions: over 200 African ethnic groups, the
majority are Bantu; four largest tribes-Mongo, Luba,
Kongo (all Bantu), and the Mangbetu-Azande (Hamitic)
make up about 45% of the population
Religion: 51% Christian, 45% animist, 4% other
Language: French, English, Lingala, Swahili, Kikongo,
and Chiluba are all classified as official languages
Literacy: 5% fluent in French, about 35% have an
acquaintance with French
Labor force: about 8 million, but only about 13% in wage
structure
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Zaire (until October 1971 known
as Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Type: republic; constitution establishes strong presidential
system
Capital: Kinshasa
Political subdivisions: 8 regions and federal district of
Kinshasa
Legal system: based on Belgian civil law system and tribal
law; new constitution promulgated 1967, revised 1974; legal
education at National University of Zaire; has not accepted
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: Independence Day, 30 June
Branches: president elected 1970 for seven-year term
limited to two five-year terms, thereafter; National Legisla-
tive Council of 210 members elected for five-year term; the
official party is the supreme political institution
Government leader: Lt. Gen. Mobutu Sese Seko,
President
Suffrage: universal and compulsory over age 18
Elections: presidential and legislative elections in October
and November 1970; elections for urban zone councils,
legislative council, and political bureau of sole political party
held in October 1977
Political parties and leaders: Mouvement Populaire de la
Revolution (MPR), only legal party, organized from above
Voting strength: MPR slate polled 96.3% of vote in 1970
elections
Communists: no Communist Party; U.S.S.R. and Peoples
Republic of China have diplomatic missions in Zaire
Member of: AFDB, APC, CIPEC, EAMA, EIB (associate),
FAO, G-77, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFC, IHO,
ILO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, NAM, OAU, OCAM, UDEAC,
U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
ECONOMY
GDP: $3.59 billion (1976 prices), $100 per capita; 3%
annual growth 1970-76
Agriculture: main cash crops-coffee, palm oil, rubber;
main food crops-manioc, bananas, root crops, corn; some
provinces self-sufficient
Fishing: catch 124,580 metric tons (1975); imports $38
million (1974)
Major industries: mining, mineral processing, light
industries
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Electric power: 1,597,500 kW capacity (1977); 5.1 billion
kWh produced (1977), 190 kWh per capita
Exports: $1.2 billion (f.o.b., 1977 projected); copper,
cobalt, diamonds, other minerals, coffee
Imports: $1 billion (f.o.b., 1977 projected); consumer
goods, foodstuffs, mining and other machinery, transport
equipment, fuels
Major trade partners: Belgium, U.S., and West Germany
Aid: economic-U.S. (FY61-76), $488 million; (1971
estimated disbursements) Belgium, $31.4 million; France,
$6.6 million; other bilateral aid $5.4 million; U.N., $9.4
million; EC, $18.9 million; China (1973), $100 million;
military-U.S., $90 million (FY62-76); IMF, $155 million
(1976)
Budget: 1977 proposed-revenue, 770 million; expendi-
tures, $976 million
Monetary conversion rate: I zaire=US$1.17
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 5,149 km total; 3,870 km 1.067-meter gage
(851 km electrified), 126 km meter gage (1.00 m); 136 km
0.610-meter gage, 1,017 km 0.600-meter gage
Highways: 145,000 km total; 2,000 km bituminous,
66,000 km improved earth; 77,000 km unimproved
Inland waterways: comprising the Zaire, its tributaries,
and unconnected lakes, the waterway system affords over
15,000 km of navigable routes
Ports: 2 major (Matadi, Boma), 1 minor
Pipelines: refined products, 740 km
Civil air: 43 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 337 total, 281 usable; 23 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 2 with runways over 3,660 m, 2 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 61 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: limited, barely adequate telephone
service, telegraph service good; 28,000 telephones (0.1 per
100 popl.); 12 AM, 1 FM, and 2 TV stations; I Atlantic
Ocean satellite station; domestic Comsat network
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 6,291,000; 3,149,000 fit
for military service
LAND
745,920 km2; 5% under cultivation, 5% arable, 10%
grazing, 13% dense forest, 6% marsh, 61% scattered trees and
grassland
Land boundaries: 6,003 km
PEOPLE
Population: 5,471,000 (July 1978), average annual growth
rate 3.2% (7-76 to 7-77)
Nationality: noun-Zambian(s); adjective-Zambian
Ethnic divisions: 98.7% African, 1.1% European, 0.2%
other
Religion: 82% animist, about 17% Christian, and under
1% Hindu and Muslim
Language: English official; wide variety of indigenous
languages
Literacy: 28%
Labor force: 402,000 wage earners; 375,000 Africans,
27,000 non-Africans; 15% mining, 9% agriculture, 9%
domestic service, 19% construction, 9% commerce, 10%
manufacturing, 23% government and miscellaneous services,
6% transport
Organized labor: 100,000 wage earners, primarily in
industrial sector, are unionized (early 1968)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: Republic of Zambia
Type: republic since October 1964
Capital: Lusaka
Political subdivisions: 9 provinces
Legal system: based on English common law and
customary law; new constitution adopted September 1973;
judicial review of legislative acts in an ad hoc constitutional
council; legal education at University of Zambia in Lusaka;
has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
National holiday: 24 October
Branches: modified presidential system; unicameral legis-
lative; judiciary
Government leaders: President Kenneth Kaunda; Prime
Minister Mainza Chona
Suffrage: universal adult
Elections: general election scheduled for 1978
Political parties and leaders: United National Independ-
ence Party (UNIP), Kenneth Kaunda; former opposition
party banned in December 1972 when 1 party state
proclaimed
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Voting strength (1973 election): in first presidential and
parliamentary elections under single-party system, 43% of
eligible voters went to polls; Kaunda was only candidate for
President; National Assembly seats were contested by
members of UNIP
Communists: no Communist Party, but sympathizers of
socialism in upper levels of government, UNIP, and labor
unions
Member of: AFDB, Commonwealth, FAO, G-77, GATT
(de facto), IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IDB, IEA, IFC, ILO,
International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMF, IPU, ITU,
NAM, OAU, U.N., UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO
ECONOMY
GNP: $2 billion (1977 est.), $420 per capita; real annual
growth rate, 2.1% (1971-76); negative in 1977
Agriculture: main crops-corn, tobacco, cotton; net
importer of most major agricultural products
Major industries: copper mining and processing
Electric power: 1,563,400 kW capacity (1977); 7.2 billion
kWh produced (1977), 1,340 kWh per capita
Exports: $900 million (f.o.b., 1977 est.); copper (92%),
zinc, cobalt, lead, tobacco
Imports: $680 million (c.i.f., 1977 est.); machinery,
transport equipment, foodstuffs, fuels, manufactures
Major trade partners: EEC, Japan, China, South Africa
Aid: economic-China (1967-76), $331 million; U.K.
(1964-67), $63 million; IBRD (1965-75), $432 million; U.S.
(FY53-76), $36 million; U.S.S.R., $9 million; Eastern Europe,
$50 million; military-$14 million (1964-76), mainly U.K.
and Canada; $18 million, Communist
Budget: 1976 est.-revenue $510 million, expenditures
$665 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 Zambia kwacha=US$1.12
(official)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,014 km, all narrow gage (1.067 m); 13 km
double track
Highways: 34,869 km total; 4,456 km paved, 2,853 km
crushed stone, gravel, or stabilized soil; 4,660 km improved
and unimproved earth
Inland waterways: 2,250 km including Zambezi River,
Luapula River, Lake Kariba, Lake Bangweulu, Lake
Tanganyika; principal port on Lake Tanganyika is
Mpulungu (of only local importance)
Pipelines: 724 km crude oil
Civil air: 10 major transport aircraft
Airfields: 172 total, 165 usable; 14 with permanent-sur-
face runways; 1 with runway over 3,660 m, 3 with runways
2,440-3,659 m, 22 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: facilities being modernized and
expanded; high-capacity wire and radio relay connect
centers of Kitwe in northern mining region and Lusaka
along axial north-south route; 77,400 telephones; (1.7 per 100
pop,.); 4 AM, 1 FM, and 3 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean
satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 1,160,000; 603,000 fit
for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1977, $79 million; 12.9% of central government budget
UNITED STATES
This "Factsheet" on the U.S. is provided solely as a service
to those wishing to make rough comparisons of foreign
country data with a U.S. "yardstick." Information is from
U.S. open sources and publications and in no sense represents
estimates by the U.S. intelligence community.
LAND
9,363,396 km2 (contiguous U.S. plus Alaska and Hawaii);
19% cultivated, 27% grazing and pasture, 32% forested, 22%
waste, urban, and other
WATER
Limits of territorial waters (claimed): 3 nm (fishing 200
nm)
Coastline: 19,924 km
PEOPLE
Population: 218,437,000 (July 1978), average annual
growth rate 0.8% (current)
Ethnic divisions: 86.5% white, 11.7% black, 1.9% other
Religion: total membership in
religious
bodies,
129,714,000; Protestant 69,743,000,
Roman
Catholic
48,882,000, Jewish 6,115,000, other
religions
4,973,000
(1975)
Language: English, predominantly
Literacy: almost complete
Labor force: 96.9 million, unemployment 7.7% (1976)
Organized labor: 20.1% of total (1976 prelim.)
GOVERNMENT
Legal name: United States of America
Legal system: based on English common law; dual system
of courts, state and federal; constitution adopted 1789;
judicial review of legislative acts; accepts compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction, with reservations
National holiday: Independence Day, 4 July
Voting strength (1976 presidential election): Democratic
Party (Carter), 40,829,000 (50.1%); Republican Party (Ford),
39,146,000 (48%); minor parties, 1,578,000 (preliminary
figures)
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Communists: party membership, 10,000-11,000 (est.);
General Secretary, Gus Hall
Member of: ADB, ANZUS, CENTO, Colombo Plan,
DAC, FAO, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO,
ICES, IDA, IDB, IEA, IFC, IHO, ILO, International Lead
and Zinc Study Group, IMCO, IMF, IPU, ITC, ITU, IWC-
International Whaling Commission, IWC-International
Wheat Council, NATO, OAS, OECD, U.N., UNESCO,
UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
ECONOMY
GNP: $1,691.6 billion (1976); 64% private consumption,
13.5% private investment, 21% government; $7,860 per
capita; 1976 growth rate, 10.2%
Fishing: catch 2.8 million metric tons (1975); imports
$1,381 million, (1975); exports $298 million, (1975)
Crude steel: 116.1 million metric tons produced (1976),
540 kg per capita
Electric power: 557,012,300 kW capacity (1977); 2
trillion kWh produced (1977), 9,750 kWh per capita est.
Exports: $114.8 billion (f.o.b., 1976); machinery and
transport equipment, chemicals, cereals, mineral fuels
Imports: $129.6 billion (c.i.f., 1976); transport equipment,
machinery, mineral fuels, steel, nonferrous metals, metal
ores
Major trade partners: 22% Canada, 8% Japan, 5% West
Germany, 5% U.K. (1975)
Official development assistance (aid): obligations and
loan authorizations (FY76), economic $3.9 billion, military
$2.7 billion
Budget: National Accounts Basis, expenditures
billion, revenues $287.6 billion
Fiscal year: I October-30 September
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 277,686 km (1973)
Highways: 6,059,200 km (1972)
Inland waterways: 40,416 km of navigable inland
channels, exclusive of the Great Lakes; freight carried 951
million short tons (1970)
Pipelines: petroleum, 279,966
Ports: 25 major
Merchant marine: 600 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
9,982,730 GRT, 14,722,666 DWT; includes 3 passenger, 5
short-sea passenger, 163 cargo, 119 container, 14 roll-on/
roll-off cargo, 234 tanker, 1 liquefied gas, 17 bulk, 2
combination ore/oil, 23 LASH Seebee and barge carriers, 19
specialized carriers; in addition there are 178 ships in reserve
fleet
Civil air: 2,716 major transport
Airfields: 15,257 (1976)
Telecommunications: 155 million telephones (7.8 tele-
phones per 100 popl.); 4,500 AM, 3,600 FM, and 985 TV
broadcast stations; 436 million radio and 133 million TV
receivers (1977)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 1,133,000, navy and marines 1,029,000,
air force 827,000 (1976)
Military budget: $100.1 billion (1977)
228
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